The company, ranked No. 1 on the CRN 2022 Solution Provider 500, had grown to 738,000 employees. Accenture said Thursday it plans to lay off 19,000 employees over the next 18 months after a year ...
The company plans to cut between 700 and 900 employees in its U.K. office in response to a downturn in demand for its services, but the firm told CRN to not expect any other ‘extraordinary ...
Accenture now expects full-year revenue growth in ... in severance-related costs this fiscal year after recording $1.1 billion the previous year when it said it would cut around 19,000 jobs, ...
Consulting firm Accenture has revealed it is axing around 19,000 jobs across its worldwide workforce, including the UK, over the next 18 months. The New York-listed group said the cuts – about 2 ...
Thyssenkrupp Steel TKA-0.53%decrease; red down pointing triangle plans to cut jobs and scale back production capacity in response to challenging market conditions, with weak demand, high energy ...
Luminar to Cut Nearly 20% Jobs as Part of Restructuring (Reuters) - Luminar Technologies, a maker of lidar sensors for self-driving cars, said on Friday that it would cut its workforce by about 20 ...
SunPower (NASDAQ:SPWR) +4.5% in early trading Wednesday after disclosing a restructuring plan intended to further advance efforts to reduce operating costs. CEO Tom Werner said SunPower (SPWR ...
Electric vehicle powerhouse Tesla is reportedly planning to cut more than 10 per cent of its global workforce – some 14,000 jobs – with CEO Elon Musk telling staff that the lay-offs “must be ...
, opens new tab is to cut up to 680 jobs in its development organisation, which helps bring its drugs to market, the Swiss pharmaceuticals company said on Tuesday. Around 440 jobs will go in ...
The U.S. economy showed the first big slowdown in job gains in more than a year last month, suggesting that early cracks in the red-hot labor market are starting to appear. The Labor Department's ...
Toshiba Corp. is seeking to cut 5,000 jobs or roughly 10% of its headcount in Japan, the Nikkei reported, underscoring the fading stigma of layoffs in a country grappling with chronic labor shortages.