A slew of companies revealed this week they plan to trim their headcounts.
The layoffs come on top of The Walt Disney Co. and Amazon also doing rounds of cuts this week as part of previously-announced workforce reductions.
Disney’s second round of layoffs commenced Monday, with Reuters reporting some 4,000 people getting let go across this and the prior round in late March. A third will take place “before the beginning of the summer” that will complete the 7,000 cuts Disney announced in February, according to a memo from CEO Bob Iger.
Meanwhile, Amazon’s cloud computing and human resources divisions on Wednesday faced layoffs after the company in March revealed plans for 9,000 more cuts. The e-commerce giant is shrinking its employee count by 27,000 overall this year.
Several other companies announced layoffs this week.
About a quarter of Lyft’s workforce will be impacted by the latest job cuts, the ride-share company announced Thursday.
The operating costs savings that Lyft expects from the 1,072 layoffs and restructuring efforts will be directed toward “continued service-level improvements benefitting riders and drivers,” according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The cuts were foreshadowed last week in a staff-wide email from new Lyft CEO David Risher, who had said the company needed to be a “faster, flatter” one where “everyone is closer to our riders and drivers.”
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More than 250 job openings were also eliminated as another cost-cutting step, according to Lyft.
Dropbox’s global workforce will see its numbers trimmed by 500, a development CEO Drew Houston revealed in a Thursday blog post. Impacted employees, roughly 16%, received notification the same day.
The “natural maturation” of Dropbox’s existing businesses and “headwinds from the economic downturn” have had an impact on the cloud storage company’s growth, a factor Houston said prompted the layoffs, FOX Business reported.
He also said the company’s “next stage of growth” necessitates a “different mix of skill sets, particularly in AI [artificial intelligence] and early-stage product development.” Dropbox moved people to different teams “wherever possible” as it works to boost its AI efforts, according to his blog post.
First Republic, a bank impacted by the recent banking crisis, indicated Monday it will do layoffs, intending to eliminate 20-25%.
The regional lender reported having a total of over 7,200 full-time equivalent employees at the end of last year. That figure also counted temporary workers and contractors, it said.
First Republic said it was working to “increase insured deposits, reduce borrowings from the Federal Reserve Bank and decrease loan balances to correspond with the reduced reliance on uninsured deposits” on top of the layoffs and other cost-cutting measures.
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About 1,800 workers belonging to Gap Inc.’s headquarters and upper field workforce will lose their jobs, Gap said Thursday. Within fiscal 2023’s first half, those layoffs and related actions are expected to have largely occurred.
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“We are taking the necessary actions to reshape Gap Inc. for the future – simplifying and optimizing our operating model, elevating creativity, and driving better delivery in every dimension of the customer experience,” Interim CEO Bob Martin said in a statement. “These changes include the consistent brand leadership structures we announced last month aimed at flattening the organizational structure to improve the quality and speed of decision-making, while in turn reducing overhead expense.”
Gap is aiming to save about $300 million with its efforts.
Deutsche Bank CEO Christina Sewing told analysts and investors Thursday the bank “will begin to reduce our senior non-client-facing workforce by 5%” and will “limit new hiring” for such jobs. Both of those “right-sizing” moves, he said, would start in the second quarter.
Other “efficiency measures” it is taking are “streamlining the mortgage platform and further downsizing of the technology center in Russia,” according to an earnings release.
In an effort to make 3M “stronger, leaner and more focused,” the company will shrink its total number of employees by 6,000. The multinational conglomerate revealed its plan involving the cuts as it reported its first-quarter earnings Tuesday.
In prior layoffs in January, 2,500 people in manufacturing roles lost their jobs, as previously reported by FOX Business.
On Wednesday, Tyson Foods joined the group of companies announcing layoffs this week, with the Arkansas-based firm reportedly planning to cut some senior leadership and corporate jobs. It previously said in March it was slashing 1,700 positions in connection to the closure of a pair of chicken plants.
Reuters reported that for senior leadership, the newly-revealed reductions will affect 15%, while the share for corporate positions impacted will come in at 10%.
FOX Business reached out to Tyson Foods for comment.
Daniella Genovese contributed to this report.