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Thursday March 28, 2024

Twitter to cut 9 percent staff

By our correspondents
October 28, 2016

NEW YORK: Twitter announced plans Thursday to cut nine percent of its workforce as the struggling social network reaffirmed its strategy to drive growth after failing to find a buyer.

"We see a significant opportunity to increase growth as we continue to improve the core service," chief executive Jack Dorsey said while releasing quarterly results showing more losses.  "We have a clear plan, and we´re making the necessary changes to ensure Twitter is positioned for long-term growth."

Twitter reported a net loss for the quarter of $103 million, compared with a $132 million loss a year earlier. Revenues meanwhile grew eight percent to $616 million, most of that from advertising.

The key metric of monthly active users rose only modestly to 317 million from 313 million in the prior quarter -- a growth pace which has prompted concerns over Twitter´s ability to keep pace in the fast-moving world of social media and attain profitability.  Twitter said the restructuring "is intended to create greater focus and efficiency" and help move toward profitability in 2017.

Twitter was widely reported to be in talks to sell the one-to-many messaging service, and it held meetings with Google parent Alphabet and cloud computing giant Salesforce. But no deal materialized and Salesforce said Twitter was not a good fit for the group.  Even though Twitter has never posted a profit, Dorsey said the results show positive signs.

"The key drivers of future revenue growth are trending positive, and we remain confident in Twitter´s future," he said.  The cuts would amount to about 350 jobs based on the Twitter website´s headcount of 3,860 employees worldwide. Twitter will incur a charge of $10 million to $20 million for the reorganization.

Twitter shares jumped more than five percent in pre-market trades, after the results topped most analyst forecasts and after one financial blog reported that Walt Disney Co. had reopened talks on an acquisition.