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Who got shafted in the big tech purge?

While these companies have in many ways disrupted traditional business models, when it comes to cost-cutting they deploy the well-established method of reducing head count.

Twitter increased its workforce by 53 percent over 2020 to 2021, then cut it by 58 percent over the past year. Meta hired 60 percent more people during COVID and has cut 15 percent recently. Microsoft and Alphabet (Google) added close to 50 per cent more staff over 2020 to 2021 and have since slashed their respective workforces by 5.5 per cent and 7.7 per cent.

Large as these numbers are, they demonstrate that if these firms want staffing to return to pre-COVID levels, there is a long way to go.

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Among the big tech names, Apple is the only one that went on a hiring binge through COVID but has yet to announce any chunky lay-offs. This position may not hold and more will be known when the firm reports on Thursday US time.

A deep dive into the make-up of those laid off conducted by data experts at 365 DataScience reveals some interesting details.

First, the median time that those recently laid off had worked for their company was 2.5 years. This makes it clear that it was a last-in first-out redundancy drive. Those “onboarded” during COVID were the first to be “offboarded”.

The data showed that most of the staff departures took place in the US, but many tech giants slimmed their workforce in many other countries, including Australia.

While these companies have in many ways disrupted traditional business models, when it comes to cost-cutting they deploy the well-established method of reducing head count.

But it wasn’t necessarily the junior staff who were shown the door. The median years of experience came in at 11.5 years and almost half were aged between 30 and 40. In the tech world where employees generally skew young, people with that many years of experience would be quite senior – with higher salaries.

History has shown it is quite usual for firms on cost-cutting drives to hollow out mid-level higher paying professions because the salary savings are improved.

Curiously, the study found that the largest group of laid-off employees did not hold tech jobs – 27.8 percent worked in human resources and recruitment. This is where Amazon, Meta and Microsoft focused their lay-offs.

It probably makes sense that HR isn’t as busy when hiring has ground to a near halt that poachers have become prey.

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Additionally, there is a suggestion that HR roles are increasingly vulnerable to replacement by artificial intelligence (AI) – certainly the part of it that does the grunt work such as checking resumes.

Twitter and Google concentrated their lay-offs in software engineering, which was overall the second-biggest affected group among the tech giants, coming in at 22.1 percent.

Marketing employees followed with 7.1 percent, while customer service accounted for 4.6 percent, and public relations and communications was 4.4 percent.

The bad news is that, according to the sample group studied by 365 DataScience, only 10 percent have found another job.

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