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Amazon, Apple, Meta, Twitter: The growing list of tech giants cutting jobs and freezing hiring

One of the big news stories right now is Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter and mass layoffs at the social platform.

However, Twitter isn’t the only tech company making drastic changes to its staff right now.

In fact, there’s an ongoing trend across tech companies which is seeing mass layoffs and hiring freezes.

Why are so many tech companies cutting back on staff?

When it comes to careers, tech has long been advertised as a safe bet in job security.

Fast-moving days and fluid when it comes to choice, it can undoubtedly be a stressful working environment – but pay is generally good and, ultimately, the world will always need people who can work in tech.

So it seems strange that in 2022, the era of the James Webb Telescope and robots who can interact like actual humansso many companies across the sector are making cuts and instigating hiring freezes.

The household names recently include Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft and Twitter.

The reason? Unfortunately, the same reason we’re seeing this trend across the board in business right now.

High interest rates and the cost of living crisis means consumers are spending less money. That, in turn, impacts the revenue for these companies. Less revenue, of course, means businesses need to cut costs.

The current climate seems to indicate that investors are bracing themselves for the upcoming economic downturn – and potential recession that follows.

Planning for the worst?

That seems to be the general consensus. While a full-scale recession is still just speculation, when big names like Amazon, Apple and Microsoft – some of the richest companies in the world – announce layoffs and hiring freezes, it can feel like the inevitable is happening.

The key tech companies announcing layoffs and hiring freezes

Amazon

The e-commerce giant has halted “new incremental” hiring across its workforce.

Apple

Apple has “paused almost all hiring”, a decision which could last until late 2023.

BT

The last time BT made some job cuts in 2018, the firm slashed 13,000 roles over three years as part of a cost reduction strategy. Now, it’s likely to be making even more layoffs.

Lyft

Lyft announced at the beginning of November that it would be cutting 700 jobs.

Meta

For the first time in history, social media giant Meta is looking at a hiring freeze and potential job cuts.

Microsoft

Last month, Microsoft cut about 1,000 jobs.

Twitter

Elon Musk began staff layoffs on Friday (November 4) as part of his new, self-appointed role of “Chief Twit”- or rather “Twitter Complaint Hotline Operator” according to his Twitter bio.

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