Alphabet lays off hundreds from global recruitment team


A logo of Google is seen at its exhibition space, at the Viva Technology conference dedicated to innovation and startups at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France June 15, 2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

(Reuters) - Google parent Alphabet is laying off employees from its global recruiting team as the tech giant continues to slow hiring, it said on Wednesday.

The company's decision to let go of a few hundred employees is not part of a wide-scale layoff and will retain a significant majority of the team for hiring critical roles. It will also help the workers search for roles within the company and elsewhere.

Alphabet is the first "Big Tech" company to lay off employees this quarter, after peers like Meta, Microsoft and Amazon downsized aggressively earlier in 2023 as a weak economy put an end to their pandemic-led hiring sprees.

California-based Alphabet cut about 12,000 jobs in January, reducing its workforce by 6%.

Layoffs in the U.S. rose more than threefold in August from July and nearly fourfold compared with a year ago, according to a report by employment firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast that new claims for state unemployment benefits would rise by about 8% in the week ended Sept. 9, after having fallen 13,000 to 216,000 in the prior seven-day period.

(Reporting by Arsheeya Bajwa and Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

How to escape your doomscroll hellhole
Google Translate rival DeepL launches live translation feature
'Mario & Luigi: Brothership' review: Mario & Luigi energise an island-hopping quest
'Call of Duty: Black Ops 6' review: When war becomes an aesthetic, nobody wins
TikTok parent ByteDance’s valuation hits $300 billion amid US ban uncertainty, WSJ reports
Turkey fines Amazon's Twitch 2 million lira for data breach
What to know about Elon Musk’s contracts with the US federal government
What is DOGE? Houston experts say Trump's new 'department' is not actually a department
Netflix back up for most users in US after outage, Downdetector shows
From a US$1mil DoorDash scam to a massive crypto heist, Gen Z linked to sophisticated online crimes

Others Also Read