Latest News
spacer View All spacer
 
December 4, 2009
 
Take-Two: 'The Safest Place To Be Is In Triple-A' [17]
 
FTC: Game Business 'Outpaces' Other Industries In Content Guidance [4]
 
Take-Two Cuts Forecast On Lagging MLB, Holiday Games; Delays Max Payne 3 [8]
spacer
Latest Features
spacer View All spacer
 
December 4, 2009
 
arrow What Gamers Think About Microtransactions [5]
 
arrow Postmortem: Twisted Pixel's Splosion Man [3]
 
arrow Shattering The Boundaries: Sidhe's Big User Testing Gains [4]
spacer
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
December 4, 2009
 
How My Grandfather Won The War: Designing for One
 
A Controversy around Korean Online Baseball Games
 
Safely releasing references in C++ [1]
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
December 4, 2009
 
Radical Entertainment / Activision
Front End Programmer (Intermediate)
 
Radical Entertainment / Activision
Environment Artist (Temporary)
 
Radical Entertainment / Activision
Prop Artist (Temporary)
 
Nihilistic Software
Console Network Programmer
 
Koei Canada Inc.
EXPERIENCED GAME PLANNER/DESIGNER
 
Zoe Mode
Senior Animator
 
Zoe Mode
Senior Technical Artist
 
Zoe Mode
Senior Programmer
spacer
About
spacer News Director:
Leigh Alexander
Features Director:
Christian Nutt
Editor At Large:
Chris Remo
Advertising:
John 'Malik' Watson
Recruitment/Education:
Gina Gross
 
News

  Microsoft: Massive Layoffs Only 28 Percent, Still 'Committed To Growing The Business'
by Leigh Alexander
1 comments
Share RSS
 
 
May 7, 2009
 
Microsoft: Massive Layoffs Only 28 Percent, Still 'Committed To Growing The Business'
Advertisement
Previous reports of a 75 percent headcount reduction at Microsoft-owned in-game ad firm Massive are "wildly inaccurate," says a representative.

"In total, the business unit will see a headcount reduction of 28 percent," a rep tells Gamasutra. "We have made these adjustments in response to general benchmarks and growth trends in the in-game advertising industry."

"They will allow us operate more efficiently in the future, and we remain committed to growing the business. We foresee no disruption whatsoever to our current relationships with global, blue chip brands and leading game publishers."

Microsoft is currently in the process of implementing a cost-cutting plan across all of its businesses.

In January, the company said it would cut a total 5,000 jobs, or five percent of its total workforce, over the coming 18-month period "in the areas of R&D, marketing, sales, finance, [legal], HR, and IT" in order to reduce costs.
 
   
 
Comments

steve roger
profile image
Who cares? Microsoft isn't the only one doing this. Companies are laying off people left and right. This is just another business cycle. Plus the Microsoft workforce is highly educated and they can just easily be rehired by going to a local employment agency. Microsoft is a business not a charity. Go ahead cut 75 percent.


none
 
Comment:
 


Submit Comment