Following Apple’s revision to its Q1 2019 earnings earlier this month, the company is said to be planning to reduce its hiring. According to a report from Bloomberg, Apple plans to “cut back on hiring for some divisions” following its slowdown in iPhone sales.
Tim Cook reportedly made the announcement at Apple’s all-hands meeting earlier this month. The exact plan is still unclear, with Cook not having decided which divisions would experience hiring cutbacks. He did indicate at the meeting, however, that areas such as artificial intelligence will “continue to add new employees at a strong pace.” Further, Cook noted that a division’s importance to Apple’s future is not “measured by hiring rates.”
Bloomberg adds that after the all-hands meeting, select Apple senior vice presidents met with VPs, senior directors, and other managers. The senior VPs put an emphasis on the fact that “the iPhone sales slowdown is an opportunity for new innovation.”
An important distinction to remember is that a hiring slowdown is not the same as layoffs.
Finally, the report adds that Apple plans to continue expanding services like Apple Music to third-party platforms:
At the beginning of the month, Apple revised its Q1 2019 earnings expectations. The company had originally offered revenue guidance of between $89 billion and $93 billion, which it lowered to “approximately” $84 billion.
Despite that revision, Tim Cook said recently that there is still a “culture of innovation in Apple” and that the company has an exciting product and services pipeline.
Related stories:
- AAPL issues rare revision to earnings guidance, lowering expectations due to ‘fewer iPhone upgrades’ & China struggles
- Tim Cook holding all-hands meeting w/ Apple employees on Thursday to discuss Q1 2019
- Apple replaced 11 million iPhone batteries in 2018, up from its usual of 1-2 million
- AAPL hits 52 week low of $149, down 36% from $233 October high
- Tim Cook defending AAPL on CNBC tonight, says ecosystem ‘probably underappreciated’
- Tim Cook teases ‘new services’ coming in 2019, says Apple’s ‘greatest contribution to mankind’ will be health-related