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Google lays off 10K "workers"

Advertising downturn could churn AdSense publishers

         

incrediBILL

9:05 am on Nov 24, 2008 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



The big just fall harder and this will be an economic tipping point that has a massive ripple effect through the AdSense publishing community as well.

[webguild.org...]

Google has been quietly laying off staff and up to 10,000 jobs could be on the chopping block according to sources. Since August, hundreds of employees have been laid off and there are reports that about 500 of them were recruiters for Google.

AdSense publishers brace for shockwave:

There is no question the economic downturn is hitting Google hard and with the slowdown in online advertising, their troubles are just beginning.

drall

4:50 pm on Nov 24, 2008 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It never made any sense to me why they have/had so many employees when the business has not really changed since 2004.

Anyango

7:04 am on Nov 25, 2008 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member




It never made any sense to me why they have/had so many employees when the business has not really changed since 2004.

It may not have changed, but it has, for sure, Grown!. And with that there is always a need of more employees

signor_john

4:14 pm on Nov 25, 2008 (gmt 0)



Since August, hundreds of employees have been laid off

If I'm reading the article correctly, it appears that the layoffs are of contractors, rather than of employees. Contractors are hired as temps--at least in theory--and in many cases (I don't know if this applies to Google) they're supplied by outside agencies that specialize in "permatemps."

There's no question that the "contractor" description has been abused in the high-tech industry--remember the Vizcaino v. Microsoft class-action suit that was settled a number of years ago?--but it shouldn't be surprising to see a company shrink its permatemp ranks during an economic slowdown. After all, one of the reasons for using "contractors" is to have staffing flexibility.

(And before anyone accuses me of defending Google or the tech industry's reliance on permatemps, let me point out that I'm merely describing how things are, not how things should be.)

shorebreak

4:44 pm on Nov 25, 2008 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I'm pretty sure the data in that report is wrong. I heard from a source at Google that they have 20,000 employees *including* the contractors, and that only 8000-9000 of the 20,000 are full-time employees and the rest are contractors.

< note - there's also a newer thread here: [webmasterworld.com...] >

[edited by: tedster at 1:55 am (utc) on Nov. 27, 2008]