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    2022 has been brutal for Silicon Valley workers


    The tech industry has enjoyed seemingly unstoppable growth over the last five years, but in 2022 it finally hit an immovable object: a slowing worldwide economy. 

    Tech companies big and small have eliminated tens of thousands of jobs this year, as executives cited inflation, rising interest rates and lower sales in digital advertising as all putting pressure on their financial outlooks. 

    The breadth of the layoffs has been breathtaking, affecting every part of the tech sector from farming robots and cryptocurrency to social media and semi-autonomous vehicles.

    The tech industry has been hit harder than other sectors during this economic slowdown. In a count of layoffs at companies who cut more than 100 people this year, NBC News estimated about 89,000 people have lost their jobs. 

    This count doesn’t include jobs lost at smaller tech firms, though, which seems to have pushed the number of tech company layoffs this year to more than 137,000, according to Layoffs.fyi, a project of San Francisco entrepreneur Roger Lee.

    Here’s a list of the layoffs hammering the tech sector this year — with more than a month still to go before the calendar turns. 

    November 

    Hewlett-Packard: 4,000 – 6,000 

    The computer maker said in a Nov. 22 statement that it planned to reduce global headcount by about 4,000 to 6,000 people over the next few years. 

    Twitter: 5,200 

    A week after billionaire Elon Musk bought the microblogging site, he laid off about half of Twitter’s workforce Nov. 4, according to CNBC. Later, Musk said the company’s economic picture was “dire,” and he kept cutting down to 2,300 people left, according to Business Insider on Nov. 21. 

    Carvana: 4,000 

    The online used car dealer said Nov. 18 that it was laying off 1,500 people, according to an internal email obtained by CNBC. In May, the company had another round of layoffs affecting 2,500 people, according to a securities filing. Some found out over Zoom calls

    Nuro: 300

    The maker of autonomous delivery vehicles told employees in an email posted online by the company that it was cutting 20% of staff, or about 300 “Nurons,” on Nov. 18. 

    Amazon: 10,000 

    The online retail giant is in the process of laying off about 10,000 corporate and tech employees, though the total number of impacted workers remains fluid and the process will continue into 2023, CNBC reported Nov. 17. Amazon paused corporate hiring Nov. 3. The company declined to comment beyond a Nov. 17 blog post by CEO Andy Jassy, who provided no exact figures. 

    Roku: 200 

    The entertainment platform said in a statement Nov. 17 that it was cutting 200 employee positions, reducing headcount expenses by 5%. 

    Orchard: 280 

    The homebuying website announced two rounds of layoffs in posts on LinkedIn on Nov. 17 and on June 23. Industry publication Inman said the layoffs affected 280 people total

    Cisco: 4,165 

    The networking company told the Silicon Valley Business Journal in a statement on Nov. 16 that it was cutting about 5% of its staff. 

    iFit: 300 

    The maker of exercise equipment, including under the NordicTrack brand, told The Salt Lake Tribune on Nov. 14 that it was cutting 20% of workers, which the newspaper calculated to be about 300 people. A spokesperson for iFit declined to confirm whether that calculation was correct. 

    Veev: 100 

    The manufacturer of prefabricated building supplies — a category known as “prop tech” — told the Silicon Valley Business Journal on Nov. 14 that it was cutting 30% of staff while it shifts focus. 

    Sema4: 750 

    The health testing and research startup said Nov. 14 that it was cutting 500 jobs, a few months after it had already cut 250 jobs and saw its president step down, according to statements the company gave to MobiHealthNews. 

    UiPath: 450

    The maker of automation software said in a Nov. 10 security filing that it was cutting 6% of its workforce. Earlier, it said in a June 24 securities filing that it was cutting 5% of its 4,200-person workforce. 

    Meta: 11,000 

    The social media company — which owns Facebook and Instagram — said it cut about 13% of its workforce Nov. 9. CEO Mark Zuckerberg blamed the slowing economy for hurting ad sales. 

    Cameo: 167 

    The app that allows celebrities to sell personalized videos laid off 80 people on Nov. 9, The Information reported, citing a statement from the company. CEO Steven Galanis announced a layoff of 87 people in May. 

    AvantStay: 187 

    A vacation rental website, AvantStay has announced two rounds of layoffs this year including cutting 144 people, or 22% of the workforce, on Nov. 9, the industry news site ShortTermRentalz reported. AvantStay did not respond to a request to confirm the figures. 

    Root: 467 

    The auto insurance startup said in a letter to shareholders Nov. 9 that it was cutting 20% of headcount. The Columbus Dispatch reported the total came to 137 jobs, in addition to 330 jobs cut in January. 

    Blend Labs: 520 

    The company, which makes software for lenders, announced job cuts three times this year in regulatory filings: 200 in April, 220 in August and 100 on Nov. 9

    Flyhomes: 400 

    A service for homebuyers, the Seattle startup had two rounds of layoffs this year, including one in July that affected 20% of staff, GeekWire reported, adding that one source said 200 people were affected. It laid off another 40% around Nov. 9, an employee wrote on LinkedIn. Flyhomes declined to comment further or provide exact figures. 

    Redfin: 1,332

    The real estate website and service cut its headcount by 862 on Nov. 7, including by eliminating its “iBuying” service RedfinNow, according to a securities filing. Back in June it cut 470 jobs, according to an earlier securities filing

    Salesforce: 999 at most 

    The business software firm, which occupies the tallest building in San Francisco, eliminated fewer than 1,000 jobs Nov. 7, CNBC reported. It employed 73,541 people as of January. Salesforce did not respond to a request for a more specific number. 

    Zendesk: 350 

    The software company specializing in customer support said Nov. 7 that it was cutting 5% of its workforce. SFGate reported the total jobs affected as 350. Zendesk did not respond to a request to confirm the number. 

    Lyft: 743

    The ride-hailing app had two rounds of layoffs at its corporate offices this year: 60 people in July, according to a memo reported by The Wall Street Journal, and 683 people Nov. 3, according to a securities filing. The second round hit 13% of the company. 

    Stripe: 1,100 

    The online payments company cited “a different economic climate” including inflation and energy shocks when it cut about 14% of its staff Nov. 3. CNBC calculated the cuts affected about 1,100 people. Stripe declined to confirm that calculation or provide exact figures. 

    Opendoor: 550 

    The home-flipping business, facing a turbulent housing market, said in a blog post that the cuts Nov. 2 came to 18% of its workforce. 

    Chargebee: 142 

    The startup, which makes software for businesses to manage subscriptions and billing, cited market conditions for the cuts Nov. 2, TechCrunch reported citing confirmation from the company. 

    Chime: 160 

    The online bank announced Nov. 2 it was laying off 12% of its workforce, according to a statement provided to CNBC. 

    Upstart: 140 

    The internet-based lender cited a “challenging economy” in cutting 7% of its workforce Nov. 1, according to TechCrunch, which cited confirmation from the company. 

    Gem: 100 

    A maker of recruiting software, the startup cut a third of its workforce Nov. 1, The Information reported. Gem did not respond to a request to confirm the numbers. 

    October 

    Booking.com: 226 

    The travel website said in a regulatory filing Oct. 31 that it was closing a Michigan call center. 

    Fifth Season: 100 

    A startup focusing on robotics for farming, Fifth Season shut down and laid off the entire company, the Pittsburgh Business Times reported Oct. 29. The company did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Mindbody: 400 

    The company, which makes booking software for gyms and yoga studios, laid off about 400 employees around Oct. 26, according to The Pragmatic Engineer, a newsletter. Mindbody did not respond to a request to confirm the number. 

    Zillow: 300 

    The real estate website cut 300 positions around Oct. 26, or about 5% of employees, as part of what it called “our normal business process,” TechCrunch reported, citing confirmation from the company. 

    Fundbox: 150 

    The maker of a financial platform for businesses cut 42% of its workforce, according to CTech Oct. 25, citing a letter to employees. 

    Snyk: 228 

    The cybersecurity company said that the cuts represented 14% of its workforce, CTech reported, citing a company statement Oct. 24. It was the second round of layoffs this year. 

    Cerebral: 400 

    A startup that provides mental health services, Cerebral cut 20% of its workers Oct. 24, Insider reported. Insider cited an anonymous former employee as saying that, as part of the cuts, about 400 care counselors were laid off. Cerebral confirmed the 20% figure but declined to comment on the total number of people affected. 

    Khoros: 120 

    The maker of customer experience software cut 10% of its staff, or about 120 employees, the Austin Inno reported Oct. 21. Khoros did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Gopuff: 2,000 

    Months after eliminating 1,500 staff members in July, the delivery service said Oct. 20 it was cutting another 250 jobs in October. It also had layoffs around March, putting the number close to 2,000, Bloomberg News reported. Gopuff did not respond to a request to confirm that number. 

    MX: 200 

    The banking software startup went through a restructuring, the Salt Lake Tribune reported Oct. 19. MX did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Microsoft: 2,800 at most 

    The software and cloud-computing company had two reported rounds of layoffs this year: one in October affecting fewer than 1,000 people, Axios reported Oct. 17, and one in July that eliminated less than 1% of its 181,000 employees. In an email to NBC News, Microsoft declined to provide a specific total. 

    Clear Capital: 378 

    A real estate tech firm, Clear Capital cited rising interest rates for laying off 27% of staff, TechCrunch reported Oct. 14. TechCrunch calculated that 378 people could have been affected, given a previously announced headcount of 1,400 employees. Clear Capital confirmed the 27% figure to NBC News but declined to confirm the number of people affected. 

    HelloFresh: 611 

    The maker of delivered meal kits said it was closing a facility in the San Francisco Bay Area, Business Insider reported Oct. 14, citing state regulatory filings. 

    Pacaso: 100 

    A startup that allows people to co-own vacation homes, Pacaso slashed 30% of its workforce, industry publication Inman reported Oct. 11. Pacaso confirmed the numbers to NBC News. 

    Brex: 136 

    The maker of business financial software cut 11% of its staff, TechCrunch reported Oct. 11, citing confirmation from the company. 

    Noom: 500 

    A website for health coaching, Noom laid off 10% of its staff, TechCrunch reported Oct. 11. Noom did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Beyond Meat: 200 

    The plant-based food manufacturer said it cut about 19% of its workforce, according to an Oct. 10 regulatory filing

    Momentive: 176 

    The parent company of survey site SurveyMonkey said in an Oct. 10 regulatory filing that it had laid off 11% of its staff. It said it had 1,600 employees as of Dec. 31, 2021. Momentive declined to confirm the total number of people affected.

    Peloton: 4,600 

    The maker of stationary bicycles announced a fourth round of layoffs this year, cutting 500 jobs Oct. 6. The biggest cut was in February, when Peloton slashed 2,800 jobs, Engadget reported. Peloton did not respond to a request to confirm the total. 

    Landing: 110 

    The apartment-rental site said it was restructuring after a move from San Francisco to Birmingham, Alabama, according to an Oct. 6 report from Alabama.com, citing confirmation from the company. 

    Homie: 159 

    The home-buying and home-selling website told the Deseret News on Oct. 4 that it had laid off 40 employees, after previously laying off 119 employees in February

    September

    Truepill: Undiscolosed 

    The health testing and diagnostics company had four rounds of layoffs this year, including one for 175 people and another for 150, TechCrunch reported, saying the most recent was Sept. 29. Truepill Chief Growth Officer Doreen Bortel said in an email to NBC News that the TechCrunch figure was not correct and that while Truepill had made “workforce adjustments this past year, our headcount has increased year over year.” She declined to provide an exact figure of people laid off.  

    DocuSign: 671 

    The website specializing in electronic agreements cited a general restructuring for eliminating 9% of its workforce, according to a Sept. 26 regulatory filing. SFGate estimated that 671 people were affected. DocuSign confirmed the 9% figure but declined to give an absolute number. 

    NYDIG: 110 

    The crypto firm told employees Sept. 22 that it was cutting about a third of its workforce, The Wall Street Journal reported. NYDIG did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Klarna: 1,000

    The online lender went through multiple rounds of layoffs this year, including one in September that brought its headcount down to about 6,000 from 7,000 at the start of 2022, TechCrunch reported, Sept. 22, citing a company spokesperson. 

    Kittyhawk: 100 

    The electric aviation startup said Sept. 21 that it had decided to close up shop, and it warned that layoffs would go into effect in November, SFGate reported, citing state regulatory filings. 

    Curative Health: 109 

    A startup that offered Covid-19 testing said Sept. 20 that the cuts were part of a change in priorities, Modern Healthcare reported, citing state regulatory filings. 

    Twilio: 865

    The company, which specializes in communications tech for businesses, laid off 11% of its workforce, according to a Sept. 14 regulatory filing. Twilio had 7,867 employees as of Dec. 31, CNBC reported. A spokesperson for Twilio said the company would not confirm the number of people affected. 

    Taboola: 100 

    The cuts announced affected 6% of the digital advertising company’s workforce, CTech reported Sept. 13, citing a letter to employees. 

    August 

    Snap: 1,200 

    The owner of Snapchat said in August it was cutting 20% of its staff of more than 6,000 employees because of slowing ad sales, CNBC reported Aug. 31, citing company confirmation. It also scrapped plans for a photo-taking mini-drone named Pixy

    GoodRx: 140 

    The telemedicine company announced the cuts Aug. 30 in a securities filing, affecting 16% of its staff. 

    Packable: 510 

    The online retailer said Aug. 23 that it would liquidate and gradually lay employees off as it winds down the business, CNBC reported, citing a company memo. 

    Doma: 560 

    The homebuying tech company laid off 250 workers Aug. 19 on top of 310 job cuts in May, affecting about a quarter of its workforce in all, according to Inman, a real estate news site. 

    Wayfair: 870 

    The online retailer of furniture cut about 5% of its headcount, according to an Aug. 19 regulatory filing, as growth slowed from a pandemic-era boom in online shopping. 

    New Relic: 110 

    The startup, which makes software for other software developers, announced the cuts Aug. 18 in a securities filing

    Malwarebytes: 125 

    The Aug. 17 layoffs at the cybersecurity company affected 14% of its workforce, TechCrunch reported, citing a company co-founder. 

    GoHealth: 800 

    An online marketplace for health insurance, GoHealth told the Chicago Sun-Times on Aug. 11 that the cuts affected about 20% of its workforce. 

    Nutanix: 270 

    The cloud computing company said in a securities filing Aug. 9 that the layoffs represented about 4% of total employees. 

    Groupon: 500 

    The coupon company laid off 15% of its workforce Aug. 8, citing “overall business underperformance,” TechCrunch reported with confirmation from the company. 

    Vroom: 337 

    The vehicle marketplace said in a securities filing Aug. 8 that it had cut 337 positions since announcing a restructuring in May. 

    iRobot: 140 

    The maker of robot vacuum cleaners cut 10% of staff after Amazon bought the company, GeekWire reported Aug. 5, citing company confirmation. 

    Jam City: 150 

    The video game developer said Aug. 4 it had cut 17% of its headcount, citing the “challenging global economy,” VentureBeat reported. Jam City did not respond to a request for confirmation of the total number of people affected. 

    10x Genomics: 100 

    The biotech company laid off 8% of staff, GenomeWeb reported Aug. 4. 10x Genomics confirmed the numbers to NBC News. 

    HealthCare.com: 149 

    The health insurance marketplace announced the job cuts Aug. 3, Miami Inno reported, citing state regulatory filings. 

    Latch: 245 

    The home-and-office security company said in a statement Aug. 2 that a cut of 115 jobs affected 37% of staff. An earlier round of job cuts in May affected 130 people

    Robinhood: 1,140 

    The stock-and-crypto trading app said it slashed 23% of its workforce Aug. 2, affecting about 800 people, SFGate estimated. It was the second round for the company this year, after cutting 340 people in April. Robinhood did not respond to a request for confirmation of the total. 

    July 

    Ribbon: 136 

    A startup that allows homebuyers to make cash offers for a fee cut one-third of its staff, Inman reported July 28, citing company confirmation. 

    Rivian: 840 

    The maker of electric vehicles including delivery vans said in July it was laying off about 6% of its workforce, CNN reported July 28, citing an email from management. 

    Shopify: 1,000 

    The e-commerce website said July 26 it was laying off about 10% of its workforce, citing a slowdown in the growth of online shopping after a coronavirus-fueled boom, CNBC reported. 

    Appgate: 130 

    The cybersecurity firm told employees July 25 that it was cutting 22% of total staff, according to a securities filing

    Rad Power Bikes: 163 

    The maker of electric bikes had two rounds of layoffs this year: 63 employees July 21 and 100 employees April 12, according to GeekWire, which cited company confirmation. 

    Gemini: 170 

    The cryptocurrency exchange founded by the Winklevoss twins cut 7% of employees, or 68 people, around July 18, TechCrunch reported. A month earlier it had cut 10%. Gemini did not respond to a request for confirmation of the total. 

    Invitae: 1,000 

    The genetics startup said in a July 16 securities filing that it was laying off more than 1,000 employees

    Calibrate Health: 156

    The weight-loss startup cut 24% of its workforce, Bloomberg reported July 15. Calibrate Health did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Fabric: 120 

    The robotics startup said July 13 that it was layoffing off 40% of them, TechCrunch reported, citing company confirmation. 

    Tonal: 262 

    The fitness equipment manufacturer told CNBC July 13 that it was cutting 35% of its workforce. 

    Argo AI: 150 

    The autonomous vehicle tech startup laid off about 5% of its workforce, TechCrunch reported July 7. Argo AI did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Celsius Network: 150 

    The cryptocurrency platform said July 3 that the cuts would affect a quarter of its staff, CTech reported, citing a company blog post. The company later filed for bankruptcy protection, and in an Oct. 11 court filing said that 102 staff had left the company since it filed for bankruptcy. 

    June 

    Enjoy Technology: 400 

    The gadget retailer cut about 18% of its workforce as it filed for bankruptcy, Crunchbase News reported June 30, citing bankruptcy filings. 

    Weee!: 150 

    The online grocery app cut 10% of its employees, Business Insider reported June 29, citing anonymous sources. Weee! declined to comment on the number of people affected. 

    Unity: 200 

    The video game company laid off “slightly more than 200 people,” or 4% of its workforce, Protocol reported June 29. A spokesperson told NBC News that over half of them got rehired within other parts of the business, so in the end only about 1% of the workforce was affected. 

    StockX: 120 

    Cuts at the sneaker seller affect 8% of headcount, The Information reported June 28. StockX did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Cue Health: 170 

    The medical testing company confirmed the job cuts to MobiHealthNews on June 27. 

    AppLovin: 300 

    The advertising startup cut 12% of its workforce, AdExchanger reported June 27. It affected about 300 people, the Silicon Valley Business Journal reported, citing company confirmation. 

    Netflix: 450 

    The streaming service laid off about 300 employees, about 3% of headcount, in the wake of slower revenue growth, CNBC reported June 23. It had laid off 150 employees a month earlier

    MasterClass: 120 

    CEO David Rogier tweeted June 22 that he was laying off 20% of staff. It affected about 120 people, the online education company told TechCrunch

    Intuit: 715 

    The tax and business software firm said June 22 that it was overhauling its business and prioritizing “the most important work.” 

    Tesla: 3,475 

    Musk said June 21 that the electric carmaker’s layoffs would affect around 3.5% of its overall workforce. Tesla said it employed 99,290 people as of the end of 2021. More than 500 employees were laid off at one Nevada factory, according to a lawsuit by former employees. Tesla did not respond to a request for confirmation of the total. 

    SummerBio: 101 

    The Covid-19 testing startup announced June 20 that it was shutting down and laying off 101 workers, according to Bay Area Inno and the company’s website

    Notarize: 110 

    The online notary service told the Boston Business Journal on June 15 that it was cutting 25% of its workforce

    Coinbase: 1,100 

    One of the largest cryptocurrency exchange companies said June 14 it was slashing 18% of its jobs, marking the beginning of what some analysts called a possible “crypto winter.” 

    BlockFi: 170 

    A crypto lending startup, the company cited a “dramatic shift in macroeconomic conditions” when it slashed 20% of its staff, CNBC reported June 13. 

    Crypto.com: 260 

    CEO Kris Marszalek cited the broader market downturn in trimming 5% of its corporate workforce June 10. 

    Stitch Fix: 330

    The online fashion company told CNBC on June 9 that it was laying off 15% of salaried positions. 

    OneTrust: 950 

    The maker of privacy software cut about 25% of its workforce, citing “capital markets sentiment” in a June 9 statement

    Bird: 138 

    The e-scooter startup laid off 23% of its staff, a move that TechCrunch calculated on June 7 as equal to around 138 employees. Bird did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Sonder: 200 

    The short-term rental website said in a June 6 securities filing that it was cutting 21% of its corporate workforce and 7% of “front line” roles. At the end of 2021, the company said it had 800 salaried and 800 hourly employees. Sonder did not respond to a request for confirmation of the total. 

    Policygenius: 170 

    The online insurance company cut about 25% of its staff, Axios reported June 6, citing company confirmation. 

    Carbon Health: 250 

    The healthcare company eliminated about 8% of its workforce, citing “changing market conditions” in a June 2 statement

    May 

    Lacework: 300

    The cybersecurity startup confirmed to Protocol on May 25 that job cuts affected 20% of staff. The Pragmatic Engineer, a newsletter, said the total came to about 300 jobs. Lacework did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    Bolt: 250 

    The online payments startup eliminated about a third of its workforce as part of what CEO Maju Kuruvilla called a broad restructuring, Bloomberg reported May 25, citing an anonymous source. Bolt confirmed that it laid off a third of its workforce but declined to provide an absolute number. 

    Butler Hospitality: 1,000 

    The startup, a kind of “ghost kitchen” model for hotel room service, quietly dissolved May 13, laying off its entire workforce, TechCrunch reported

    Zwift: 150 

    The indoor cycling and sports app laid off about 150 people and canceled its hardware plans, sports tech journalist Ray Maker reported May 12, citing sources. A spokesperson for Zwift declined to confirm the figure.

    Reef: 750 

    The startup that finds alternative uses for parking lots laid off 5% of its workforce, citing the broader economy, The Information reported May 6. Reef did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    March 

    Curology: 147 

    The skin care website cut about 20% of its workforce March 16, according to the San Francisco Business Times, citing state filings. 

    Knock: 115 

    The home-buying and home-selling startup said in a press release March 15 that it needed to cut costs because of turmoil in the housing market. Bloomberg reported 46% out of 250 workers were affected. A spokesperson said the Bloomberg report was “close” but declined to provide an exact number. 

    Better.com: 3,000 

    The online mortgage lender laid off about a third of its workforce in March. It has continued layoffs since then without providing a number, TechCrunch reported in August. A spokesperson for Better.com did not immediately know the total number of people affected. 

    Adaptive Biotechnologies: 100 

    The startup, which researches the human immune system, told The Seattle Times on March 9 that it was laying off about 12% of its workforce. 

    Hyperscience: 100 

    The document-processing software startup laid off about 25% of its staff, The Information reported March 3. Hypescience did not respond to a request for confirmation. 

    February 

    Virgin Hyperloop: 111 

    The experimental transport company confirmed to the Financial Times on Feb. 21 that it was pivoting to focus on freight, affecting nearly half its staff





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