Date: December 02, 2024
Snapchat fires its employees second time in a month
Snap, the parent company of Snapchat is taking its restructuring process too seriously. This time, the company has fired 100 of its employees from the sales staff, which make its 3 percent of the total workforce. The new announcement follows the firing of 120 engineers, earlier this month. This layoff continues the series, unfolded since January this year. Previous cuts included 24 content-focused staffers in January and to add more agony to it, Tom Conrad, VP of the product also departed from Snapchat’s management board.
The social media and messaging company had about 3,000 employees in December last year. The recent cut has resulted in depletion of almost 8 percent of the total workforce. Snapchat claims the latest round of cutbacks are the result of a strategic review conducted at the end of last year. Surprisingly, the move has come after two years of rapid hiring by the company.
The uproar has come at the least expected time, as Snap is already facing a lot of questions due to its rollout of a much-despised redesign in the first quarter of 2018. Meanwhile, the disgruntled tweets from Kylie Jenner, Rihanna, and Chrissy Teigen has only made it worse for the company. The backlash took a toll on the stock price of Snapchat. On a separate note, Rihanna denounced an ad that seemed to took domestic violence lightly.
Last month, Snapchat relocated its employees to a business park in Santa Monica and subleased some portion of its Venice office. This move would have surely pulled out some burden from Snapchat’s revenue wing.
On the brighter side, Snapchat surpassed analyst expectations and added almost 8.9 million daily active users in Q4, nearly in a year. In the last quarter of 2017 also, the company performed better than expected earnings in terms of its growth and revenue. One of the major factors that fueled company's revenue growth was their programmatic move.
Although, the net loss of the company was $350 million in the fourth quarter of 2017 which stand out as almost double in the same period. On the other hand, Snapchat top rivals like Facebook and Instagram fared much better in terms of revenue and the total number of users, that too when Facebook is grappling with set-back like #deletefacebook movement.
Interestingly, this was the ripe opportunity for Snapchat to gain an edge over Facebook but with the current makeover, the company would find it really hard to compete at the highest level.
Last year, there was a significant decrease in Snapchat’s ad rates due to the introduction of automated ad sales by the companies think tank. But with some additional sales, it was able to make up for the losses. Software-driven sales further pushed original content on the app, and also cut down staffers who were responsible for crafting expensive ads.
By Arpit Dubey
Arpit is a dreamer, wanderer, and tech nerd who loves to jot down tech musings and updates. With a knack for crafting compelling narratives, Arpit has a sharp specialization in everything: from Predictive Analytics to Game Development, along with artificial intelligence (AI), Cloud Computing, IoT, and let’s not forget SaaS, healthcare, and more. Arpit crafts content that’s as strategic as it is compelling. With a Logician's mind, he is always chasing sunrises and tech advancements while secretly preparing for the robot uprising.
OpenAI Is Building an Audio-First AI Model And It Wants to Put It in Your Pocket
New real-time audio model targeted for Q1 2026 alongside consumer device ambitions.
Nvidia in Advanced Talks to Acquire Israel's AI21 Labs for Up to $3 Billion
Deal would mark chipmaker's fourth major Israeli acquisition and signal shifting dynamics in enterprise AI.
Nvidia Finalizes $5 Billion Stake in Intel after FTC approval
The deal marks a significant lifeline for Intel and signals a new era of collaboration between two of America's most powerful chipmakers.
Manus Changed How AI Agents Work. Now It's Coming to 3 Billion Meta Users
The social media giant's purchase of the Singapore-based firm marks its third-largest acquisition ever, as the race for AI dominance intensifies.