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Uber and Lyft are the latest tech enterprises to hit the hiring brakes amid a market downturn that’s threatening jobs at both private and public companies.
In early May, Meta became the first tech giant to freeze hiring — an “unprecedented” step for the Facebook and Instagram parent, Insider . CFO David Wehner blamed an "industry-wide downturn" and said the freeze would affect nearly every team at the company.
Nearly a year after it paid nearly $28 billion to buy Slack, San Francisco-based Salesforce is slowing hiring and pausing some recruitment to conserve cash, Insider. The company is also dialing back off-sites and other expenses.
Turmoil has reigned at the blue bird social media company in the wake of Elon Musk’s plans to pay $44 billion to take it private. That deal, announced in April, now looks uncertain — and at least five executives have since left the company or been pushed out. CEO Parag Agrawal said on May 12 that Twitter would freeze hiring and rescind some standing job offers.
As the price of bitcoin crumbles, popular cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase will cool on hiring. “Heading into this year, we planned to triple the size of the company,” COO Emilie Choi wrote in a on May 17. “Given current market conditions, we feel it’s prudent to slow hiring and reassess our headcount needs against our highest-priority business goals.”
The company behind Snapchat reported a earlier this week that pulled share prices down nearly 40%. CEO Evan Spiegel stopped short of a total freeze, but he’s hitting the hiring brakes. Snap will add just 500 more people this year, compared to 2,000+ over the past 12 months. “We continue to face rising inflation and interest rates, supply chain shortages and labor disruptions, platform policy changes, the impact of the war in Ukraine and more,” he wrote in an internal memo The Verge.
Ride-sharing giant Uber is freezing hiring across the entire business, Insider on May 24. CEO Dara Khosrowshahi reportedly insists that layoffs are not in the cards.
The pink ride-share rival quickly followed suit on May 24. President John Zimmer sent a memo to staff saying that Lyft will slow hiring in the U.S., reduce some departmental budgets and grant new stock options to employees in response to a stock price that’s fallen by 60% so far this year, The Wall Street Journal.
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