Xbox CEO says latest job cuts ‘follow Microsoft’s lead in removing layers of management’
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Microsoft is laying off thousands of workers, its second mass layoff in months and its largest in more than two years.
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July 2, 2025
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Fortune
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·MicrosoftXbox CEO says job cuts ‘ Microsoft’s lead in removing layers of management’BY Matt O'BrienBY The Associated PressBY Matt O'BrienBY The Associated PressMicrosoft is laying off thousands of workers, its second mass layoff in months and its largest in more than two years
Blue/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesMicrosoft is laying off thousands of workers, its second mass layoff in months and its largest in more than two years
The giant began sending out layoff notices Wednesday that hit the company’s Xbox game and other divisions
Among those losing their jobs are 830 workers tied to Microsoft’s headquarters in Redmond, Washington, according to a notice sent to state officials Wednesday
The company won’t say the total number of layoffs except that it was 4% of the workforce it had a year ago
Microsoft said the cuts will affect multiple teams around the world, including its sales division, part of “organizational changes” needed to succeed in a “dynamic marketplace. ” A memo to gaming division employees Wednesday from Xbox CEO Phil Spencer said the cuts would position the game “for enduring success and allow us to focus on strategic growth areas. ” Xbox would “ Microsoft’s lead in removing layers of management to increase agility and effectiveness,” Spencer wrote
Microsoft employed 228,000 full-time workers as of last June, the last time it reported its annual headcount
The company said Wednesday that its layoffs would cut close to 4% of that workforce, which would be 9,100 people
But it has already had at least three layoffs this year and it’s unly that new hiring has matched the amount lost
Until now, this year’s biggest layoff was in May, when Microsoft began laying off 6,000 workers, nearly 3% of its global workforce and its largest job cuts in more than two years as it spends heavily on artificial intelligence
Microsoft just last month cut another 300 workers based out of its Redmond headquarters, on top of nearly 2,000 who lost their jobs in the Puget Sound region in May, most of them in software engineering and duct management roles, according to notices it sent to Washington state employment officials
Microsoft’s chief financial officer Amy Hood said on an April earnings call that the company was focused on “building high-performing teams and increasing our agility by reducing layers with fewer managers. ” The company has repeatedly characterized its recent layoffs as part of a push to trim management layers, but the May focus on software engineering jobs has fueled worries how the company’s own AI code-writing ducts could reduce the number of people needed for gramming jobs
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said earlier this year that “maybe 20, 30% of the code” for some of Microsoft’s coding jects “are bably all written by software. ” The layoffs, however, seemed centered on slower-growing areas of the company’s, said Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives. “They’re focused more and more on AI, cloud and next-generation Microsoft and really looking to cut costs around Xbox and some of the more legacy areas,” Ives said. “I think they overhired over the years
This is Nadella and team making sure that they’re keeping with efficiency and that’s the name of the game in Wall Street. ” The trimming of the Xbox staff s Microsoft’s years-long expansion of the surrounding its gaming console, culminating in 2023 with the $75. 4 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard — the California-based maker of hit franchises Call of Duty and Candy Crush
Before that, in a bid to compete with Sony’s PlayStation, it spent $7. 5 billion to acquire ZeniMax Media, the parent company of Maryland-based game publisher Bethesda Softworks
More recently, much of Microsoft’s spending has been on the data centers, specialized computer chips and other infrastructure needed to advance its AI ambitions
The company anticipated those expenses would cost it $80 billion in the last fiscal year
Its new fiscal year began Tuesday
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