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Technology layoffs show high-flying sector not immune from slowdown

Technology layoffs show high-flying sector not immune from slowdown

CBC
Friday, June 24, 2022 04:34:47 PM UTC

Canada's technology sector has grown rapidly in recent years, as homegrown startups and foreign giants set about hiring hundreds of thousands of well-educated and talented workers. But that expansion has recently slowed to a crawl, as high inflation, interest rate hikes and a downturn for cryptocurrency have taken a lot of optimism out of the sector.

Chris Albinson, CEO of Waterloo-based incubator Communitech, says the pullback in the U.S. is more pronounced because there are more of what he calls "go for the moon" companies with dubious fundamentals suddenly finding themselves unable to adapt to the new reality.

Canadian tech companies are faring comparably better at the moment because generally speaking they are much better stewards of capital, he says, but that doesn't mean there isn't anxiety.

"There are some founders that were 18 years old when the last recession happened," he told CBC News. "There's going to be stress on the system, but I think they're ultimately going to come out of that much stronger."

Valuations for tech giants like Meta, Amazon, Apple and Netflix have cratered in recent weeks, and where once there was a fierce war for talent, many tech giants are implementing hiring freezes and even cutting staff.

U.S. streaming giant Netflix announced Thursday it's cutting another 300 jobs, the second time in as many months it has announced layoffs of that size.

Crowdsourced website layoffs.fyi has documented more than 20,000 tech job cuts in the past two months alone, mostly in and around major U.S. technology hubs like Seattle and San Francisco.

While cutbacks in Canada are less dramatic, they are happening.

Canadian financial tech unicorn Wealthsimple laid off 13 per cent of its staff last week, citing "unprecedented" levels of volatility in explaining the cut of roughly 160 positions. "Many of our clients are living through a period of market uncertainty they've never experienced before," CEO and founder Michael Katchen told staff in announcing the news.

Jacqueline Au was among those let go from the Toronto-based business. She suspected something might be up when she noticed the company started spending less on her department, marketing, earlier this year. "When that happens ... it's natural for the team to think, well, what's gonna happen to my job, if we're not spending any marketing money?"

It was her first time being laid off, and while she said it was unpleasant, she's enjoying the time off to think about what her next career move may be. She enjoys the technology sector, she said, but she knows that more job cuts are coming so she'll be choosy about who she signs on with next.

"I think that this is just the beginning, I think the industry is going to have to keep trimming the fat to stay afloat," she told CBC News. "I think there's going to be ups and downs, but winter is here to stay."

Vancouver-based Thinkific laid off about 20 per cent of its staff in April, and Sumeru Chatterjee was one of the 100 or so people let go. Originally from India, Chaterjee came to the U.S. to attend university and worked in various tech jobs for about a decade before making the leap to come to Canada in 2020.

"Last year, the general sentiment across the industry ... was we need to grow, we need to rapidly expand our market lead to hire lots of people," he told CBC News. "So the layoff was sort of a dramatic turn of events."

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