Microsoft cuts 800 more jobs in 2009, which is expected to be the last wave of job cuts
In the final wave of 5,000 global job
cuts announced by Microsoft at the start of 2009, the software giant
announced 800 more job layoffs.
"I can confirm we're
eliminating 800 jobs today," Microsoft spokesperson Lou Gellos
told WSJ. "That's part of the
larger program we announced in January." The positions being
eliminated from Wednesday will affect staff internationally and in a
range of business units, he said, without providing further
detail."
Microsoft was forced to cut near 6.3% of its
workforce as the global economy worsened, with the job cuts projected
to save $1.5 billion in 2010. In January, the company laid off
1,200 employees, and then slashed 3,000 jobs four months later, the
company disclosed.
One surprise layoff has to be Don Dodge,
former Microsoft Emerging Business Team director, who disclosed in
his blog that the layoff "was
a total surprise to me."
After the final expected
round of job cuts, the company still has nearly 88,000 employees
worldwide. Despite the job cuts, Microsoft continues hiring in
departments it believes will be utilized more frequently in the
future.
The job cuts have proven beneficial to Microsoft, as
the company beat both first quarter earnings and revenue -- in part
to the job cuts -- though revenue in Windows and Windows Live both
declined.
"Nowadays, security guys break the Mac every single day. Every single day, they come out with a total exploit, your machine can be taken over totally. I dare anybody to do that once a month on the Windows machine." -- Bill Gates
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