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The Netflix building on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, California.
The Netflix building on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, California. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images
The Netflix building on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, California. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images

Netflix lays off 300 employees in second round of job cuts

This article is more than 1 year old

150 employees were also cut last month in a move to curb losses from dwindling subscription numbers

Netflix announced on Thursday it laid off 300 employees in a second round of job cuts after losing subscribers for the first time in more than a decade.

The cuts amounted to about 4% of the streaming giant’s workforce, and mostly affected US employees. They came after the company cut 150 jobs last month.

“While we continue to invest significantly in the business, we made these adjustments so that our costs are growing in line with our slower revenue growth,” Netflix said in a statement.

Netflix said in February it had lost 200,000 subscribers globally at the start of 2022, and projected a decline of 2 million users in the upcoming quarter.

The company blamed the drop on a range of factors, including increased competition, the economy, the war in Ukraine, and the large number of people who share their accounts with non-paying households.

Last month’s layoffs also mostly affected the company’s US workforce. Advocates and former employees said at the time the cuts included many employees from underrepresented groups, and that the company also seemed to be pulling back on some of the diverse content it had funded in the years since the death of George Floyd.

Ted Sarandos, chief content officer and co-CEO at Netflix, at the Cannes Lions summit on Thursday. Photograph: Eric Gaillard/Reuters

“Nearly everyone I see on LinkedIn posting about being laid off worked on diversity, equity, and inclusion across the company,” former Netflix worker Evette Dionne tweeted at the time. “These are not the only people being laid off, but they comprise too many of the 150 for it to be coincidence.”

The company has denied those reports.

A spokesman for Netflix said its diverse, audience focused channels such as Con Todo and Strong Black Lead are a priority for the company and that they are “investing heavily in them”.

“We’re committed to inclusion on-screen, behind the camera and in our workforce,” he said. “We are making changes to how we support our publishing efforts, including bringing some of this important work in-house.”

To offset subscriber losses, Netflix is also considering adding advertising to the service in return for a lower-priced subscription in addition to cutting costs, a move it had long resisted.

On Thursday, Netflix’s chief executive, Ted Sarandos, said the company is in talks with several companies for advertising partnerships.

Media reports from earlier this week said it was in discussions with Alphabet’s Google and Comcast’s NBCUniversal for potential marketing tie-ups.

“We’re talking to all of them right now,” Sarandos said at the Cannes Lions conference when asked which company Netflix was looking to partner with.

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