More than 400 Twitch workers were impacted by Amazon’s expansive layoffs announced Monday, according to a memo from new Twitch CEO Dan Clancy. The company cut 9,000 jobs total across its Amazon Web Services, human resources, Twitch, and advertising divisions. News of the layoffs comes days after former Twitch CEO Emmett Shear stepped down from that role.
Clancy blamed the layoff on “the current macroeconomic environment,” saying user and revenue growth did not meet expectations. “In order to run our business sustainably, we’ve made the very difficult decision to shrink the size of our workforce,” Clancy said. Twitch declined to comment further, nor would it confirm Twitch’s total headcount.
Twitch was founded as Justin.tv in 2007 before rebranding to Twitch Interactive in 2014. Amazon purchased the streaming platform for $1 billion that same year. Twitch had a particularly successful run during the pandemic. The platform, already dominating the streaming space, was more popular than ever. Twitch’s viewership numbers have declined, but they’re still high.
This is Amazon’s second round of layoffs this year, with more than 18,000 people cut from the company in January. That wave of layoffs was largely focused on Amazon Stores, which includes its comics business, Comixology.
It feels like a different tech company is announcing layoffs every day, and it’s extended into the video game industry, too. Microsoft’s 10,000 cut jobs impacted studios like Bethesda and 343 Industries, which make the upcoming Starfield and Halo Infinite, respectively. Unity Software, which makes the products people use to make games, and Riot Games are among the other studios that laid off workers. Why are these layoffs happening? Official reasons
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