Amazon on Monday announced 9,000 job cuts after it had already cut 18,000 positions earlier this year.
The units affected include advertising, human resources, the cloud-computing business Amazon Web Services and Twitch, a platform for creators, known for live-streaming video game play.
“This was a difficult decision, but one that we think is best for the company long term,” Amazon Chief Executive Andy Jassy wrote in a memo to employees that was posted on the company’s website.
Amazon stock declined about 2.6% on Monday morning, to $96.40 a share.
An Amazon representative said the reductions would not hit Culver City-based Amazon Studios, the company’s film and television business. In his memo, Jassy did not specify how many roles would be eliminated at Twitch, which has an office in San Francisco.
Twitch’s chief executive, Emmett Shear, announced last week that he was stepping down and that he would work in an advisory role. He said he was doing so to spend more time with his son. He had been CEO since 2011. Dan Clancy became the new chief executive after previously serving as president.
Amazon bought Twitch in 2014 for $970 million as a way for the company to expand its footprint in gaming and cultivate a relationship with the platform’s more than 1 million broadcasters, which included gamers, esports organizations, publishers and other creators at the time.
Today Twitch has about 2.58 million concurrent viewers, and there have been challenges regarding its growth, according to Ray Wang, a principal analyst at Palo Alto-based Constellation Research. Viewership declined 6% in 2022 compared to 2021, Wang said.
“They over-invested in Twitch, but the growth has not caught up,” Wang said.
It’s an area that other media companies have also had to grapple with, where there was a surge of viewership during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic as people stayed home and looked to entertain themselves. Now, there’s a challenge in trying to keep those audiences engaged.
“Things have been different post-pandemic,” Wang said in a text message.
Amazon’s announcement Monday follows layoffs at other tech and media companies. In January, Spotify said it was reducing its employee base by 6%, and last week, Meta announced a second round of job cuts, laying off 10,000 staffers and eliminating 5,000 open roles.
“We believe this is Amazon ripping the band-aid off on more layoffs as the bloated cost structure is front and center for Jassy in this softer macro,” said Daniel Ives, a managing director at Wedbush Securities. “It’s the right medicine at the right time for Amazon and the Street wants to see these moves as Silicon Valley continues to cost cut.”



