In a worrying trend that doesn’t seem to be coming to an end anytime soon, another major tech company is looking to lay off a reasonable chunk of its workforce to manage operational costs.
For the third time this year, the shoe fits Spotify.
Yikes!
After two rounds of layoffs earlier in the year, the music-streaming giant looks to let go of 1500 additional employees from the 8,800 people on its roster. i.e. about 17% of its current workforce. This comes on the back of a 600-person-strong downsizing in January and another round of layoffs that saw 200 members of staff exit the company in June.
In a note to employees, later
“In 2020 and 2021, we took advantage of the opportunity presented by lower-cost capital and invested significantly in team expansion, content enhancement, marketing, and new verticals. These investments generally worked, contributing to Spotify’s increased output and the platform’s robust growth this past year. However, we now find ourselves in a very different environment. And despite our efforts to reduce costs this past year, our cost structure for where we need to be is still too big.”
For anyone who took a look at the company’s
For context: Spotify recorded upward trends in monthly users (26%), subscribers (16% Y/Y), and total revenue (11% Y/Y). Not to mention a gross margin that finished above guidance at 26.4%.
To ease the way for the swathe of talent getting terminated by the company, Spotify will incur between 130 and 145 million Euros in charges, including five months' worth of severance payment, as reported by
The layoff trend continues to ravage industries globally,
Spotify holds a modest rank of #269 on this week’s HackerNoon Tech Company Rankings.
By now it’s no news that Netflix, the predominantly video-streaming platform, has been dipping its feet into the video game industry. Following the release of its interactive film, Bandersnatch, in 2020, and subsequent interactive storytelling projects, the company has pushed further into the gaming market.
In the
If you were a part of that minority or perhaps share their sentiments, then Netflix’s latest video game title acquisition might be just the thing to push the needle for you.
Last week, the company announced, in a post shared by VP of Games Mike Verdu, that Rockstar’s golden goose is coming to the streaming platform.
Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy—The Definitive Edition is coming to Netflix on December 14 for Netflix members on the App Store, Google Play, and in the Netflix mobile app.
I don’t know about you, but I do love me some GTA.
Acquiring a gaming title with a following of this size might just be the spark that Netflix games need to get to the next level. Especially when you consider the positive uproar that Rockstar’s trailer for its heavily anticipated Grand Theft Auto VI unleashed in gaming communities across social media.
It’s still too early to tell whether this acquisition is Netflix’s smoking gun, considering that the game titles are still available to play on more gaming-focused consoles. Nonetheless, it’s an exciting time for the gaming community.
Netflix sits pretty at #6 on this week’s HackerNoon Tech Company Rankings.
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