Business
Roku to slash 200 jobs, amounting to 6% of workforce
Roku plans to lay off another 200 workers, or 6% of its workforce, the video-streaming company said in a government filing on Thursday, just months after a prior round of layoffs in the fall that slashed 200 jobs.
The company's revenue surged during the pandemic when customers stuck indoors came to rely on at-home Entertainment.
However, the return of consumer habits more closely resembling pre-pandemic life has posed a challenge for the San Jose, California-based company.
The round of layoffs, which the company described as a "restructuring plan," aims to "lower the Company's year-over-year operating expense growth and prioritize projects that the Company believes will have a higher return on investment," the government filing said.
MORE: Tech layoffs 2023: Companies that have made cuts
The layoffs will cost the company between $30 and $35 million due to severance payments and other employee benefits, the filing said.
The company's revenue stood essentially unchanged over the last three months of 2022 compared with the same period a year ago, according to an earnings report released last month.
MORE: No evidence of TikTok national security threat but reason for concern, experts say
Roku had previously warned of a difficult Business environment expected at the end of last year due to a slowdown in ad spending and the adverse effects of inflation.
Shares of Roku ticked up about 1.5% in early trading on Thursday.
-
Business2d ago
US House passes measure that could punish nonprofits Treasury Department decides are ‘terrorist’
-
Business2d ago
Fast fashion may seem cheap, but it’s taking a costly toll on the planet − and on millions of young customers
-
Business3d ago
New Information: These HV Big Lots Are Now Staying Open
-
Business3d ago
Brush Fire Rages On Near Butternut In Great Barrington, MA
-
Business3d ago
U.S. Antitrust Regulators Seek to Break Up Google, Force Sale of Chrome Browser
-
Business3d ago
Successful White Men Alone Can’t Create America’s Economic Future
-
Business3d ago
The Rise of Silent Services
-
Business4d ago
Tim Latimer