Software engineers face increasing prospects of being laid off as the tech industry begins downsizing due to economic uncertainties.
Tech work was once considered a safe bet regarding job security, with many people encouraged to “learn to code” over the past two decades.
Tech companies saw rapid growth during the pandemic when people were stuck at home and their services were in demand.
Demand has fallen since then, and the economy has taken a beating. Recent bank failures have pushed lenders to encourage tech companies to make do with less.
Software Engineers Hit
Software engineers are disproportionally facing the largest numbers of layoffs this year relative to other professions in the United States, according to data provided to Vox from Revelio Labs, a business data firm.Revelio Labs data said that software engineers represented nearly 20 percent of job cuts this year, despite making up 14 percent of employees.
Recruiters, HR specialists
Recruiters and HR specialists were overrepresented in these earlier layoffs, Reyhan Ayas, the senior economist who led the Revelio Labs study, told Business Insider.“If we look at 2023 layoffs, it’s software engineers who have overtaken recruiters in layoffs,” Ayas said.
Revelio’s latest data said that nearly 5 percent of laid-off tech employees this year so far were still recruiters, the position with the most losses after software engineers.
Job cutbacks in the software engineer sector now outweigh other former positions by nearly 4 percent.
The wave of layoffs has spread from the tech industry to the finance and media sectors as well.
Cutting Corners in Silicon Valley
In the first quarter of 2023, nearly 20 percent of 170,000 tech company layoffs were software engineers, according to data from layoffs.fyi and Parachute List, echoing figures from Revelio Labs.Until very recently, Meta was offering generous salaries to fill the highly desired technical positions, but now the firm is terminating them in what CEO MarkMeta calls, the “year of efficiency.”
Meanwhile, Amazon announced in the same month that it was laying off an additional 9,000 employees on top of the 18,000 people dismissed in January.
The mass layoffs in the tech sector contrast with previous ones and signal a change in where to prioritize cutting back.
“Earlier layoffs were focused on future hiring,” said Ayas, which was done to hire additional specialists like tech engineers, but now the focus is on improving business efficiency standards and boosting product revenue.
Recently laid-off tech workers may now find it harder to find new jobs with the same benefits and pay levels.
Tech workers are still highly in demand, but their bargaining power and ability to ask for extra perks and salaries have been weakened.