"Hiring the best, the brightest and the highest number of
employees was a badge of honor at tech companies. Not anymore as layoffs surge.
When Stripe, a payments start-up valued at $74 billion, laid
off more than 1,000 employees this month, its co-founders blamed themselves.
“We overhired for the world we’re in,” they wrote. “We were much too
optimistic.”
After Elon Musk, Twitter’s new owner, slashed the company’s
staffing in half last week, Jack Dorsey, a founder and former chief executive
of the social media service, claimed responsibility. “I grew the company size
too quickly,” he wrote on Twitter.
And on Wednesday, when Meta, the parent company of Facebook
and Instagram, shed 11,000 people, or about 13 percent of its work force, Mark
Zuckerberg, the chief executive, blamed overzealous expansion. “I made the
decision to significantly increase our investments,” he wrote in a letter to
employees. “Unfortunately, this did not play out the way I expected.”
The chorus of conceding by tech executives that they hired
too many people is ricocheting across Silicon Valley as the industry rushes to
make cuts, blaming a worsening economy.
But at least part of the surge in layoffs was
self-inflicted. When the companies enjoyed soaring profits and a belief that
the pandemic-fueled boom times would keep going, they aggressively expanded by
hoarding the most fought-over and expensive resource in the software business:
talent.
Silicon Valley tech companies have long seen hiring as more
than just filling openings. The industry’s fierce talent wars showed that
companies like Google and Meta were gaining the best and brightest. Ballooning
staffs and a long reign atop lists of the most-desired jobs for college
graduates were emblems of growth, deep pockets and prestige. And to employees,
the work became something larger — it was an identity.
This mentality became ingrained at the largest tech
companies, which offer numerous perks on lavish corporate campuses that rival
universities. It was echoed by smaller start-ups, which dangle a chance at
life-changing wealth in the form of stock options.
Now these practices are giving the tech industry
indigestion.
“When times are flush, you get excesses, and excesses lead
to overhiring and optimism,” said Josh Wolfe, an investor at Lux Capital. “For
the past 10 years, the abundance of cash led to an abundance of hiring.”
More than 100,000 tech workers have lost their jobs this
year, according to Layoffs.fyi, a site that tracks layoffs. The cuts range from
well-known publicly traded companies like Meta, Salesforce, Booking.com and
Lyft to highly valued private start-ups such as the Gopuff delivery service and
the Chime and Brex financial platforms.
Many of the job losses have taken place in tech’s most
experimental areas. Astra, a rocket company, cut 16 percent of its staff this
week after tripling its head count last year. In the cryptocurrency industry,
which has suffered a meltdown this year, high-value companies including
Crypto.com, Blockchain.com, OpenSea and Dapper Labs have cut hundreds of
workers in recent months.
Tech leaders were too slow to react to signs of an economic
slowdown that emerged this spring, after many of the companies had already been
on hiring sprees for several years, tech analysts said.
Meta, whose valuation soared past $1 trillion, doubled its
staff to 87,314 people over the past three years. Robinhood, the stock trading
app, expanded its work force nearly sixfold in 2020 and 2021.
“They’ve charged ahead with these plans that are no longer
based on reality,” said Caitlyn Metteer, director of recruiting at Lever, a
provider of recruiting software.
For many, it’s a moment of shock. “Are we in a bubble”
panics in the tech industry over the last decade have always been short-lived,
followed by a rapid return to even frothier good times. Even those who
predicted that pandemic behaviors enabled by the likes of Zoom, Peloton,
Netflix and Shopify would ebb now say they underestimated the extent.
Many believe this downturn will last longer because of the
macroeconomic factors that created it. For the past decade, low interest rates
pushed investors into riskier assets that offered higher returns. Those
investors valued fast growth over profits and rewarded companies that took big
risks.
In recent years, tech companies responded to the flood of
cash from investors and a rapidly growing business by pouring money into
expansion via sales and marketing, hiring, acquisitions and experimental
projects. The excess capital encouraged companies to staff up, adding fuel to
the war for talent.
“The pressure is to just spend the money quick enough so you
can grow fast enough to justify the kinds of investments V.C.s want to make,”
said Eric Rachlin, an entrepreneur who co-founded Body Labs, an artificial
intelligence software company that Amazon bought.
Expanding head count was also a way for managers to advance
their careers. “Getting more people on the team is easier than telling everyone
to just work super hard,” Mr. Rachlin said.
That led the tech industry to gain a reputation for
corporate bloat. Rumors often circulated of highly compensated workers who
clocked just a few hours of work a day or juggled multiple remote jobs at once,
alongside elaborate office perks like free laundry, massages and renowned
cafeteria chefs.
This spring, Meta scaled back its perks, including laundry
service.
In the past, tech workers could quickly change jobs or land
on their feet if they were cut because of the plethora of open positions, but
“I don’t think we know yet if everyone in this wave of layoffs will be able to
do that,” Mr. Rachlin said.
Some people see a chance to help those entering a difficult
job market for the first time. Stephen Courson recently left a career in sales
and strategy at Gartner, the research and consulting firm, and Salesforce to
create financial content. He initially planned to focus on time management, but
after many of his friends went through painful layoffs he began working on a course
that helps people prepare for job interviews. It’s a skill that many of today’s
job hunters never had to hone in flush times.
“This isn’t going to get better quickly,” he said.
Amid the drumbeat of layoff announcements, investors see an
opportunity. They are quick to point out that well-known successes of the last
decade — companies like Airbnb, Uber, Dropbox — were created in the aftermath
of the Great Recession.
This week, Day One Ventures, a venture capital firm,
announced Funded Not Fired, a program that aims to invest $100,000 into 20 new
start-ups where at least one founder was laid off from a tech company. Within
24 hours, hundreds of people had applied, said Masha Bucher, founder of the
firm.
“Some of the people are saying, ‘This is a sign I’ve been
waiting for,’” she said. “It really gives people hope.”
In the meantime, there may be more layoff announcements —
delivered through the now standard form of a letter from the chief executive
posted to a company blog.
These letters have taken on a familiar format. The bosses
explain the grim economic outlook, citing inflation, “energy shocks,” interest
rates, “one of the most challenging real estate markets in 40 years” or
“probable recession.” They take the blame for growing too fast. They offer up support
to those affected — severance, visa help, health care, career guidance. They
express sadness and thank everyone.
And they reaffirm the company’s mission."
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