Entertainment giant Disney said Wednesday it was laying off 7,000 employees, as CEO Bob Iger announced a reorganisation of the company he returned to lead last year.
In its 2021 annual report, the group said it employed 190,000 people worldwide, 80 percent of whom were full-time.
We are going to take a really hard look at the costs for everything that we make, both across television and film,” Iger said.
“Because things in a very competitive world have just simply gotten more expensive.”
The storied company founded by Walt Disney said its streaming service saw its first ever fall in subscribers last quarter as consumers cut back on spending.
Subscribers to Disney+, the streaming archrival to Netflix, fell one percent to 161.8 million customers on December 31, compared to three months earlier.
Analysts had broadly expected the decline, and the Disney share price climbed more than five percent in post-session trading.
“There are still big challenges ahead for Disney,” Insider Intelligence principal analyst Paul Verna said in a note to investors.
“Its traditional TV business is eroding, its streaming operation is not yet profitable, and it’s facing pressure from an activist investor to rein in costs and plan for a post-Iger succession.”
Disney is also going to look at the volume of content it makes and the pricing of its streaming services, Iger told analysts.
“We were in a global arms race for subscribers,” Iger said of Disney+ early days as a challenger to Netflix and Amazon Prime.
“I think we might have gotten a bit too aggressive in terms of our promotion; and we are going to take a look at that.”