In an endeavour to ‘right-size its business’, PayPal has announced its intent to reduce its workforce by nine per cent. The job cuts will affect about 2,500 employees across its global offices.
The move follows a challenging period for PayPal, marked by declining revenue, share performance, and a more than 20 per cent drop in shares over the past year. This downturn prompted the company to adjust its full-year forecast for adjusted operating margin. An internal memo shared with employees by Alex Chriss, CEO, PayPal, emphasised that the company wishes to focus on improving its efficiency. Hence, it is considering several cost-cutting measures.
The job reduction will be implemented throughout the year, impacting both existing roles and planned hires. All the affected employees will receive notifications of their job termination by the end of the week, as outlined in the internal memo.
Notably, PayPal had already undertaken a similar workforce reduction in January of the previous year, eliminating 2,000 positions globally, constituting seven per cent of its total staff. The online payments firm attributed this decision to the challenging macro-economic environment it was battling at the time.
Referring to these layoffs, the company also emphasised the necessity to adapt to the evolving world, changing customer dynamics, and the shifting competitive landscape. The company acknowledged the need for continual transformation in response to these factors.
The tech industry is witnessing a pervasive trend of layoffs, with many tech companies, including Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, TikTok and Salesforce, collectively laying off around 25,000 workers in the first month of 2024. Google initiated the trend by cutting over a thousand jobs in its Assistant and hardware units, while Amazon, Salesforce, Microsoft and others followed suit with significant workforce reductions.