Microsoft Reportedly Cutting Jobs
Microsoft is laying off a small number of employees as it begins a new fiscal year, according to a number of reports. The Windows maker cut 5,000 jobs in 2009, largely in response to the global recession.
Microsoft officials are not commenting on rumors that the company will lay
off a small number of employees following the July 1 beginning of its new
fiscal year, although online reports and blogs frequented by Microsoft
employees indicate that those cuts could already be under way.
In response to a July 6 query on the blog Mini-Microsoft, where Microsoft
employees-or those posing as employees-often post about the latest internal
machinations and gossip, a number of commenters suggested there
would be layoffs in the marketing and sales groups. "I can confirm
that an entire team in CMG (Central Marketing Group) were let go today,"
one anonymous commenter said. "I'm not sure how senior management (Steve B.)
can be allowed to remain in office when his response to the billion-dollar Kin
failure is to lay off hardworking employees."
"Got shown the door," another wrote. "Was E/110 last review,
received performance award last fiscal, nominated this fiscal. Stunned."
With Microsoft declining to issue an official statement about the matter,
however, confirming the full scope and timetable of any layoffs is difficult. Sites
such as TechFlash have cited anonymous sources as saying any layoffs will be
relatively small in number, certainly in comparison to the more than 5,000
employees that were officially axed throughout the course of 2009. The
Wall Street Journal said a "person familiar with the matter" indicated
that the layoffs will be "consistent with small reductions in staff the
company has done in the past."
Microsoft added nearly 2,000 positions in the first quarter of 2010, a
spokesperson told eWEEK. That suggests the company is continuing with a broader
strategy of reorienting its divisions to meet the challenges of the tech
landscape, shedding employees and projects in the process. In 2009, as
Microsoft wrestled with reduced revenues as the result of the global recession,
that reorientation involved discarding many underperforming and legacy
projects-such as YouTube competitor Soapbox-and concentrated on flagship
platforms such as Windows and Office.
In January 2009, Microsoft announced plans to lay off 5,000 employees. CEO
Steve Ballmer later sent a companywide e-mail stating in part, "We will
continue to closely monitor the impact of the economic downturn on the company
and, if necessary, take further actions on our cost structure, including
additional job eliminations."
In the words of a Microsoft
spokesperson in September 2009, the cuts were made to "reduce costs
and increase efficiencies" and the company was "taking necessary
actions to realign our resources [with] our top priorities." Since then, a
slowly reviving economy and the marketplace success of Windows 7 have improved
Microsoft's revenues; with that in mind, if Microsoft is indeed making small
cuts to its current ranks of 88,180 employees, it's likely more of a strategic
move than a response to economic necessity.









