Snap's Massive Layoffs Aren't Going Smoothly, According to a New ReportThe company laid off almost 20 percent of its workforce.

ByGabrielle Bienasz

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

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Last week, Snapchat's parent company Snap announced it wouldlay off over 1,200 peopleout of its roughly 6,400-person workforce, another move in a broadertech labor restructuring.

"We are restructuring our business to increase focus on.... community growth, revenue growth, and augmented reality. Projects that don't directly contribute to these areas will be discontinued or receive substantially reduced investment," CEO Evan Spiegel wrote in a statement about thechanges to the company last week.

But it reportedly did not go smoothly,according to Insider.

几个人工作或曾在提前告知the outlet there were technical issues. Namely, people were kicked out of company software during or around the time of their meetings about being laid off.

The outlet added that meetings were added to calendars, where managers read prepared words and let them know about their layoff benefits.

"It was messy, at best," one let-go worker told Insider.

The company said last week that it was providing four months of pay and help with paying for COBRA insurance,per CNN. Still, the change reportedly felt quick to many.

"It seemed like everything was fine," a former Snap employeetold Insider. "Then literally in one day, everything kinda crashed." The outlet added that whole or large portions of projects, teams, and products were axed seemingly very quickly.

But is there a good way to lay people off?

It's a "distasteful part of management that many people fear," Laurence J. Stybel, CEO and co-founder of Stybel Peabody Associates,told Harvard Business Review.Experts recommended training, practice, and being thoughtful about logistics to make it easier.

Snap did not immediately respond to狗万官方's request for comment but told Insider it was mostly technical problems.

"We are aware that there were a number of IT issues that occurred on Wednesday and we are deeply sorry that they happened. Evan apologized for this at the start of our company all hands on Thursday, and we are conducting a post-mortem and continue to follow up with any team members who may have been affected," the company said.

People who were laid off last week were likely not at this Thursday all-hands, Insider noted.

Snap's stock is down to about $10 a share, from about $46 at the start of the year.

Wavy Line
Gabrielle Bienasz is a staff writer at Entrepreneur. She previously worked at Insider and Inc. Magazine.

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