Huh. Not a mention of the impact of tax filing changes around R&D. Software development salaries can no longer be treated as expenses and are now treated (somewhat correctly) as depreciable expenses.
Not sure this is a root cause, but it certainly must be on the minds of decision makers in tech companies (large and small).
I think so too. Elon laid waste to Twitter devs & SRE and that has allowed other companies to feel it's ok now.
But that's not the whole thing - it sounds like there was massive over-hiring of devs and some madness of trying to stop other companies getting them.
What a wasteland. The thing is there is a whole raft of interesting jobs out there that don't involve actively making society worse, so hopefully some devs will move out of this scene and onto something more constructive.
2. I worked with a number of people from (pre-Musk) Twitter. The self entitlement culture the majority of these pre-Musk Twitter people espoused was toxic.
Right... And the reports documenting increased down time, broken features and spam on the "for you" page are all a false flag operation by the liberal woke mafia to dunk on daddy Elon.
Clearly so, but doesn't it kind of blow open some serious questions -- these companies have been over-hiring and importing direct competition from the third world to our labor, and now they say "lol jk, we didn't need that labor"?
Whether it's correct or not depends on the goal. This rule (and others requiring the amortisation of certain expenditures) means that companies need to keep more cash than actually needed for operations.
For a change that doesn't even change tax obligations/revenue, just shifts portions of it in time.
I'm aware of why amortisation/depreciation exists in the accounting context; I haven't found a rationale for requiring it in taxes in general, or for this case in particular. Especially for things that were paid for with cash.
Article cites the twitter layoffs as setting the example that companies can be leaner, but I'm not sure why this journalist didn't ask if it's a good example or a bad one. From the tech side, seems like twitter's reliability problem is a big red flag for why you shouldn't do it.
Money people don't seem to think like that. And if the company was going to go under due to debt, I guess he's making an effort to save it and make it rise from the ashes?
Twitter has a German court case that may end up with a fine twice their current evaluation. It is a direct consequence of Musk firing the moderation team.
And that's for only one issue of the issues many created since Musk took over.
"So far this year, nearly 20 percent of the 170,000 tech company layoffs were software engineers, even though they made up roughly 14 percent of employees at these companies".
Software engineer was the most often laid off job role at 19.3%, recruiter was second at 4.6%.
Definitely goes against the sentiment I've seen expressed here that developers are mostly not being affected.
Yes, I detect the same sentiment (and it seems like a pretty natural one given the general audience here), but it also seems useful to see some data regarding the situation.
I wonder what proportion of new pandemic hires were also software engineers.
I have no data to back this up, but my gut tells me that during the pandemic, many companies over-hired software devs, and this round of right-sizing is correcting that mistake.
This data is still compatible with the statement “most of the layoffs are not software developers”, most likely is they are being layed off at a similar rate to everyone else and “software developer” is simply the modal role at a tech company. What other category of employee do you have that many of?
First of all, I take with a grain of salt any piece about Facebook or Meta from a traditional media company (Vox belongs to Comcast) because they compete for add revenue and historically Facebook has been better at it. Should be noted that Comcast also competes with Meta for engineering talent.
> This represents a stark about-face for a company that, until recently, had been offering outrageous salaries and basically hoarding people in these highly sought-after technical positions.
I'm not sure what's the narrative they are trying to push here with the ambiguous term "outrageous" when this comp was mostly tied up to... stock performance! It's good to remember that it's in Comcast's interest to see engineering compensation go down.
Meta needed that talent if they were to be able to bring the Metaverse to market (wether it was a success or not). Think about the ground-breaking work by Occulus. The Quest is basically a 10x price reduction for VR hardware between 2010 and now.
It's good to remember that most layoffs outside of Meta (who has been pivoting pretty hard) were "tech adjacent" positions [0] [1] [2] [3] [4]
> "Additionally, Keum said that Elon Musk, who fired 80 percent of his staff but still has a (sort of) functioning product, has become a sort of inspiration for other tech CEOs, who see his extreme cuts as a way of making their more modest ones seem morally and culturally acceptable. Their stance? "Thank you, Elon Musk, for showing us that it can be done. And thank you Elon Musk for taking the blame," Keum said."
Yeah... So far Twitter completely gave up it's API. Rumor has it they lacked the manpower to actually keep it running and it was a last-ditch attempt at getting rid of bots. Same bots who flocked to the platform after the layoffs started since people in charge of mitigating these were fired.
Firing abuse and content moderation teams meant there was a lot more unsavory spam on the platform and advertisers didn't want any of it near their brand. Remember the Twitter Blue two days of spam? [5] [6]
It seems, meta aside, that if anything the bulk of the tech layoffs were in Q3/Q4 last year and started trailing off Q1/Q2 this year. If anything, it seems like other industries are starting to go through this now.
With that said, it wouldn't surprise me if things look much better next year. Companies are actually doing quite well despite the fear mongering.
Will their layoffs bring any significant efficiency compared to just letting go of Mark’s pet VR project?
I like VR, I think there is a niche in the market for it, and I respect Meta for their technological efforts in this space. But I have a feeling that Meta’s anti-competitive measures like buying up VR companies and hoarding VR talent alone probably cost more than this layoff will save over a decade.
Since lowering people's salaries seems difficult, they essentially have to let people go and eventually hire them back cheaper. $300-400k salaries seem untenable, that's 3-4x what you'd pay for the same talent in Europe, it just does not make sense long term.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 90.4 ms ] threadNot sure this is a root cause, but it certainly must be on the minds of decision makers in tech companies (large and small).
But that's not the whole thing - it sounds like there was massive over-hiring of devs and some madness of trying to stop other companies getting them.
What a wasteland. The thing is there is a whole raft of interesting jobs out there that don't involve actively making society worse, so hopefully some devs will move out of this scene and onto something more constructive.
1. Twitter works. The cuts are reasonable.
2. I worked with a number of people from (pre-Musk) Twitter. The self entitlement culture the majority of these pre-Musk Twitter people espoused was toxic.
Hmm....
For a change that doesn't even change tax obligations/revenue, just shifts portions of it in time.
I'm aware of why amortisation/depreciation exists in the accounting context; I haven't found a rationale for requiring it in taxes in general, or for this case in particular. Especially for things that were paid for with cash.
What will be the greatest benefit to humanity?
Finding gainful employment isn't difficult when you are over qualified and have spent decades practicing self study.
Being a white male with a "normal" name also tends to weight the curve a bit.
And that's for only one issue of the issues many created since Musk took over.
Software engineer was the most often laid off job role at 19.3%, recruiter was second at 4.6%.
Definitely goes against the sentiment I've seen expressed here that developers are mostly not being affected.
I have no data to back this up, but my gut tells me that during the pandemic, many companies over-hired software devs, and this round of right-sizing is correcting that mistake.
> This represents a stark about-face for a company that, until recently, had been offering outrageous salaries and basically hoarding people in these highly sought-after technical positions.
I'm not sure what's the narrative they are trying to push here with the ambiguous term "outrageous" when this comp was mostly tied up to... stock performance! It's good to remember that it's in Comcast's interest to see engineering compensation go down.
Meta needed that talent if they were to be able to bring the Metaverse to market (wether it was a success or not). Think about the ground-breaking work by Occulus. The Quest is basically a 10x price reduction for VR hardware between 2010 and now.
It's good to remember that most layoffs outside of Meta (who has been pivoting pretty hard) were "tech adjacent" positions [0] [1] [2] [3] [4]
> "Additionally, Keum said that Elon Musk, who fired 80 percent of his staff but still has a (sort of) functioning product, has become a sort of inspiration for other tech CEOs, who see his extreme cuts as a way of making their more modest ones seem morally and culturally acceptable. Their stance? "Thank you, Elon Musk, for showing us that it can be done. And thank you Elon Musk for taking the blame," Keum said."
Yeah... So far Twitter completely gave up it's API. Rumor has it they lacked the manpower to actually keep it running and it was a last-ditch attempt at getting rid of bots. Same bots who flocked to the platform after the layoffs started since people in charge of mitigating these were fired.
Firing abuse and content moderation teams meant there was a lot more unsavory spam on the platform and advertisers didn't want any of it near their brand. Remember the Twitter Blue two days of spam? [5] [6]
[0] https://interviewing.io/blog/2022-layoffs-engineers-vs-other...
[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-01-24/tech-layo...
[2] https://www.computerworld.com/article/3690309/about-those-te...
[3] https://www.gartner.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2023-03-0...
[4] https://techreport.com/news/3493451/microsoft-layoffs-ethics...
[5] https://www.businessinsider.com/twitter-lost-half-top-advert...
[6] https://www.vox.com/recode/2022/11/4/23438917/twitter-verifi...
With that said, it wouldn't surprise me if things look much better next year. Companies are actually doing quite well despite the fear mongering.
I like VR, I think there is a niche in the market for it, and I respect Meta for their technological efforts in this space. But I have a feeling that Meta’s anti-competitive measures like buying up VR companies and hoarding VR talent alone probably cost more than this layoff will save over a decade.
A fast growing tech company (meta, Google) is like a garden. You provide as much nourishment and land as possible to see what can grow.
From time to time, you need to trim back the weeds, or large yellow leaves, in order to let the desired parts grow.
(software engineering is “highest”, at 19.3%)
What roles are in the 60%??
Huh?
Hope someone will finally put vox out of their misery.