Walt Disney Co begins 7,000 layoffs
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[March 28, 2023] By
Dawn Chmielewski
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -Walt Disney Co on Monday began 7,000 layoffs
announced earlier this year, as it seeks to control costs and create a
more "streamlined" business, according to a letter Chief Executive Bob
Iger sent to employees and seen by Reuters.
Several major divisions of the company - Disney Entertainment, Disney
Parks, Experiences and Products, and corporate - will be impacted,
according to a person familiar with the matter. ESPN is not touched by
this week's round of cuts, but is anticipated to be included in later
rounds.
The entertainment industry has undergone a retrenchment since its early
euphoric embrace of video streaming, when established media companies
lost billions as they launched competitors to Netflix Inc.
Media companies started to rein in spending when Netflix posted its
first loss of subscribers in a decade in early 2022, and Wall Street
began prioritizing profitability over subscriber growth.
Iger said Disney would begin notifying the first group of employees who
are impacted by the workforce reductions over the next four days. A
second, larger round of job cuts will happen in April, "with several
thousand more staff reductions." The final round will start before the
beginning of the summer, the letter said.
The Burbank entertainment conglomerate announced in February that it
would eliminate 7,000 jobs as part of an effort to save $5.5 billion in
costs and make its money-losing streaming business profitable.
"The difficult reality of many colleagues and friends leaving Disney is
not something we take lightly," Iger wrote, noting that many "bring a
lifelong passion for Disney" to their work.
One of the first areas targeted for cuts was television production and
acquisition departments, resulting in the departure of senior
executives, a source confirmed.
Details of the layoffs had been closely guarded by the company, though
insiders anticipated reductions would happen before Disney's annual
shareholder meeting on April 3.
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A screen shows the logo and a ticker
symbol for The Walt Disney Company on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., December 14, 2017.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Anxiety has been building within Disney, as rumors swirled about
areas of possible cuts.
"It’s a dark, black box," said one Disney executive who spoke to
Reuters last week.
Many had expected cuts to fall heavily on the Disney Media and
Entertainment Division, which was eliminated in a corporate
restructuring. The unit has been without a leader since the exit of
Kareem Daniel in November, shortly after Iger returned as the
company’s CEO.
“It’s been a long time in the making,” said SVB MoffettNathanson
analyst Michael Nathanson, adding that the company first began “to
whisper” about the need to take out costs last fall, when Bob Chapek
was still Disney’s chief executive.
Josh D’Amaro, chair of Disney Parks, Experiences and Products, sent
a memo to theme parks employees in February warning that the
profitable division would experience cuts.
Officials for two of the unions representing cast members at Walt
Disney World Resorts in Orlando, Florida, said “guest-facing”
services were not expected to be affected by the layoffs.
"I don’t see where, when there are labor shortages in front-facing
guest roles, it would be a good decision to lay off workers where
the money train starts for the Walt Disney Co," said Paul Cox,
president of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage
Employees Local 631.
(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill
Berkrot and Stephen Coates)
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