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Businesses Games Entertainment

Activision Blizzard Cuts 8% of Jobs Amid 'Record Results In 2018' (kotaku.com) 112

On an earnings call this afternoon, publisher Activision Blizzard said that it would be eliminating 8% of its staff. "In 2018, Activision Blizzard had roughly 9,600 employees, which would mean nearly 800 people are now out of work," reports Kotaku. "This afternoon, the mega-publisher began notifying those who are being laid off across its various organizations, which include Activision, Blizzard, and King." From the report: On the earnings call, Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick told investors that the company had "once again achieved record results in 2018" but that the company would be consolidating and restructuring because of missed expectations for 2018 and lowered expectations for 2019. The company said it would be cutting mainly non-game-development departments and bolstering its development staff for franchises like Call of Duty and Diablo. Development sources from across the industry told Kotaku this afternoon that the layoffs have affected Activision publishing, Blizzard, King, and some of Activision's studios, including High Moon. At Blizzard, the layoffs appear to only have affected non-game-development departments, such as publishing and esports, both of which were expected to be hit hard. "Over the last few years, many of our non-development teams expanded to support various needs," Blizzard president J. Allen Brack said in a note to staff. "Currently staffing levels on some teams are out of proportion with our current release slate. This means we need to scale down some areas of our organization. I'm sorry to share that we will be parting ways with some of our colleagues in the U.S. today. In our regional offices, we anticipate similar evaluations, subject to local requirements."

Thankfully, the letter promised "a comprehensive severance package," continued health benefits, career coaching, and job placement assistance as well as profit-sharing bonuses for the previous year to those who are being laid off at Blizzard. "There's no way to make this transition easy for impacted employees, but we are doing what we can to support our colleagues," Brack wrote.
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Activision Blizzard Cuts 8% of Jobs Amid 'Record Results In 2018'

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  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Tuesday February 12, 2019 @08:41PM (#58113030)

    "This afternoon, the mega-publisher began notifying those who are being laid off across its various organizations, which include Activision, Blizzard, and King."

    Don't worry - I'm sure there are still plenty of iterations of Candy Crush still in the pipeline.

  • to help journalists learn to code.
    Do the art work for computer courses that teach code to journalists?
    Create an Ada OS?
    Help with CUDA like support on Linux?
    Mixed Reality & VR https://research.mozilla.org/m... [mozilla.org]
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Teaching journalists to code was taking the piss for them telling coal miners, learn how to code. Most of those so called journalists, if they could have learned how to code, they would have learned how to code, they ain't THAT stupid but yeah, some people, well, lets be fucking honest, most people simply can not learn how to code in any meaningful commercially competitive productive manner, not a hope, simply the way it is.

      No matter the effort at training in anything, in commercially competitive terms, som

      • Most of those so called journalists, if they could have learned how to code, they would have learned how to code, they ain't THAT stupid but yeah, some people, well, lets be fucking honest, most people simply can not learn how to code in any meaningful commercially competitive productive manner, not a hope, simply the way it is.

        A lot of people simply can't learn to write a coherent and correctly punctuated sentence either.

  • by WolfgangVL ( 3494585 ) on Tuesday February 12, 2019 @09:00PM (#58113098)

    The video-game industry spent 2018 shooting itself in the foot. Waiting for Bethesda and EA to follow suit.

    "missed expectations for 2018 and lowered expectations for 2019" == The microtransactions and loot-boxes are not working out. We need to start actually making games with realistic budgets and profit expectations.

    • I think that Bethesda and EA already both have followed suit. Each had terrible sales for flagship games (Fallout 76 and Battlefield V for Bethesda and EA respectively) and EA had its stock price cut in half by the end of 2018.
    • by darkain ( 749283 )

      What are you waiting for? EA pioneered canning people. https://heavy.com/games/2017/1... [heavy.com]

    • by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@noSpAM.gmail.com> on Tuesday February 12, 2019 @10:27PM (#58113444) Journal

      It's not just a realistic budget and profit expectation that's needed - what's needed is some risk. They almost all play it safe, and just iterate the same-old-same-old now with better graphics.

      Trust that you've got good people, (that is, if you haven't laid them all off) and let them try something new. A lot of the tries will be flops, but if you can find that big new thing, you're going to make bank. No, it's not a sure thing. But FFS, you're just laying people off left and right anyway. Might as well take a risk to have a break-out hit in the process.

      If I was in the business, I think I'd rather try something crazy innovative and get laid off when it didn't work out than grind out another clone of a decade old game only to get laid off anyway.

      And if you're just trying to milk your stock incentives, you've got enough name recognition and money to risk having to take your golden parachute and go cry on your yacht for 6 months before getting hired somewhere else. Take a risk and shoot for a giant payout! I mean, if you're the C* of a major gaming company, you absolutely do not have anything to lose. At least nothing that you're going to miss.

    • The industry may have, but the ones doing the layoffs have announced quite a hefty profit and the CEO just scored himself a nice 8 figure bonus.

    • They work at dehumanizing their "human resources" so they can sleep at night when they pull these things all the time. People wonder how genocide and such horrible things can even happen when there are actually a bunch of Satan worshipers involved... They only need look towards their local MBAs.

      They need to pay a price for laying off human workers like they are excess resources so they are not so casual about hiring them and give them stuff to do for longer term planning if something doesn't work out. Yo

  • Bad all around (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 12, 2019 @09:17PM (#58113164)

    Not a record year. Don't let the misleading slashdot headline and summary fool you. They are idiots.

    The real news on Activision Blizzard [bloomberg.com]

    • by Creepy ( 93888 )

      Yeah - I got laid off after 9.8% growth when they required 10% growth, as did 15% of the company. Got a consultant role that paid basically the same (benefits aren't as good), but pay is decent; Everyone I know that was laid off was hired by the same consulting company, and all of them extremely competent. I have no idea what the layoff criteria was, but I could pick 15 more incompetent workers than the did, but I imagine it was all about salary.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Tuesday February 12, 2019 @09:31PM (#58113240)
    >> the layoffs appear to only have affected non-game-development departments

    Good news from the perspective of a Slashdot citizen: tech skills continue to keep us out of the pool of commodity humans.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Good news from the perspective of a Slashdot citizen: tech skills continue to keep us out of the pool of commodity humans.

      A silver lining for the laid off non-technical personnel is that they now have more time to learn to code.

    • The powers that be have long since noticed that. They've been working for a decade or two to commoditize tech skills. There's been quite a bit of success, and if you haven't seen it you're just lucky.

      It's not that hard to do really. You take a tech task and break it down into smaller and smaller chunks, assigning a person to each chunk, so that no one person is critical to the entire task. You then document the hell out of everything while using as much standard equipment as possible to avoid "instituti
  • I remember back on slashdot where Wow was so big whole stories were on it and addiction was covered. Today? A few old geeks may still log in on occasion. I think micro transactions have went there course and now the CEO wants his bonus and since Wow can't grow he needs to cut costs to give himself more bonus money.

    At this point I would sell if I were a long term investor. Maybe stay for short term boosts but since Kung fu panda a half decade ago I am surprised it is still around. WOTLK was the last good exp

    • if these numbers [google.com] are to be believed.

      The 770 are folks need to support new product launches. Activision is letting them go because they're not releasing anything next year (except maybe a COD).
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday February 12, 2019 @09:53PM (#58113346)
    that everyone knows is coming. It's so frustrating because we know a recession is coming and we're doing jack squat to stop it. Just more layoffs to keep the stock prices high and maybe another round of tax cuts.

    It's not even like we don't know what to do: Regulate Wall Street so they can't gamble with our money (and make no mistake, it's out money since they're "too big to fail"), pump some money into the supply side (Tax Cuts for people who actually spend money, e.g. the working class, and the "Green New Deal"), increase the minimum wage and lift those stupid bloody tariffs. It doesn't do good to put tariffs on China when they can just build their stuff in Mexico and ship it here duty free (lord I shouldn't have to explain that).

    And where the hell is the media in all this? Why the hell aren't they calling the current Admin out for doing nothing to stop the recession?
    • i would ask, but (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Texmaize ( 2823935 )
      You understand China uses tariffs to wonderful effect don't you? I suspect you don't since you are repeating lines that others have fed you.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by SirAstral ( 1349985 )

      "It's not even like we don't know what to do:"

      Boy you got that right!

      " Regulate Wall Street so they can't gamble with our money"

      Never going to work... not ever!

      The only thing that is going to happen is that new laws designed but make it look like you are getting what you wanted but ultimately will be used to just make you subservient and to further entrench the wealth of the elite into a smaller group of hands.

      You, like most others, are going to spend their entire lives under the thumb of the bourgeois beca

      • until we stopped doing it. It started with a bit of Carter and Reagan, who began dialing back regulations on what banks could do and making stock buy backs legal (funny thing, those used to be illegal market manipulation). Clinton continued it by breaking down the wall between "Main Street" and "Wall Street" banks so that investors could mix doggy stock investments with safe mortgage investments.

        Undoing all that would be a start. Talk to any economist who isn't paid by right wing think tanks and they'll
    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by kenh ( 9056 )

      Wow, you seem really pissed, but uninformed.

      How does increasing the minimum wage help us avoid a recession?

      Are you aware of the new trade agreement w/ Mexico? It sounds like you had your talking point ready from the NAFTA days of yesteryear.

      The tariffs are a bargaining chip to lower Chinese tariffs on American goods. It is amazing how many critics of Trump fail to grasp even the most basic negotiating tactics - for instance, why does the administration say they can't rule out another (partial) government sh

      • I don't think they fail to understand it at all. At least on the management side of things they probably try to follow the same rules themselves every day. The talking heads can't walk and chew bubble gum at the same time though. But none of that matters because Orange Man Bad. They will shit on him and misrepresent the story because he beat their golden girl. The guy is gunning for a Nobel and you have morons claiming he is the antichrist.
    • And where the hell is the media in all this? Why the hell aren't they calling the current Admin out for doing nothing to stop the recession?

      Funny thing there. If you tell everyone that the current administration is doing nothing to stop the impending recession, you actually cause people to be concerned which in turn can trigger the very recession you were trying to avoid.

      The other thing is that people don't like bad news and studies have demonstrated that they begin to avoid news if it shows their own outlook as bleak (but they relish bad news for perceived enemies). Yeah, it's kinda like humans have their own Peril Sensitive Sunglasses.

    • And where the hell is the media in all this? Why the hell aren't they calling the current Admin out for doing nothing to stop the recession?

      The media doesn't work for the public, it's there to lie to you and keep you distracted.

      Media under capitalism [youtu.be]

    • I am just waiting for the day... that an entire productive force or at least the part driving the development simply quits away and founds their own company in case of such a layoff.
      I am just gessing what panic the management suddenly would get in case of such a situation.

      • 60-80% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck. Where would they get the capital to live without a paycheck for the 3-5 years it takes to establish a business?

        Also the job market's pretty bad across the board. They can find people to replace them pretty easily. Workers lack solidarity so it'd be easy to get "scabs" (google the term if you haven't heard it).

        This is gonna sound harsh, but we shouldn't indulge in fantasy. And "Walking off the Job to compete with your Boss" is by far the most famous busi
  • by rjejr ( 921275 ) on Tuesday February 12, 2019 @11:51PM (#58113772)
    Besides announcing the the 8% increase in their stock dividend they also announced a $1.5B, that's billion with a B, stock buyback. That's enough money to pay 1,500 employees, if those employees made $1 million per year. Sickening.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The new Pump and Dump. The stock gets a pump, the employees get the dump.

    • You see in the New World Order companies don't invest in Employees they invest in the company stock. This is why no employee should have any loyalty to a large company. You are just an expense item on a spread sheet.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • being so misguided as to think a company posting their best results ever has ANY effect on whether companies continue to hold on to staff deemed unnecessary.

  • Not loot crates, but more loot for senior execs, whose compensation will skyrocket while they fire employees.

  • Are they just going to have less workers? Or are they going to foreign workers in some manner?

  • Blizzard is a business that exists to make money for its investors, not to keep people employed. Employment is merely incidental. Even the games are incidental.

    Look at the greater system that generates this behavior and propose changes if you want to do something about it.

    Whining about the actors within it is useless.

...there can be no public or private virtue unless the foundation of action is the practice of truth. - George Jacob Holyoake

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