You are here: silicon.com > Management > Skills & Careers

Skills & Careers

Nokia to slash 1,700 jobs

UK in the firing line

Tags: smartphone, recession, worker, jobs

By David Meyer

Published: 18 March 2009 08:18 GMT

Nokia is to lay off approximately 1,700 staff around the globe, the handset manufacturer said on Tuesday.

The cuts follow a marked drop in profitability at Nokia which, like its rivals, is feeling the effects of the global economic downturn. In a statement, Nokia said staff would be laid off in its devices and markets units, as well as in its corporate-development office and global-support functions.

What does the recession mean for your job?

Recession making techies do more unpaid overtime

Hard times hit Bangalore

Techies still hunting new jobs despite recession

Naked CIO: Time to ask for help

Software, systems techies 'have least stressful jobs going'

Naked CIO: Job searching tips

Drunk Facebook photos killing your job prospects?

Two-thirds of UK's top IT security jobs unfilled

A precise geographical breakdown of the cuts has not yet been announced but a Nokia spokesperson told silicon.com sister site ZDNet UK on Tuesday that 700 staff will go in the Finnish company's homeland. "The UK and the US have both been named as countries in which we have a considerable number of staff," the spokesperson said. "There will be redundancies in both countries."

Nokia employs around 128,000 people around the world, with 3,200 in the UK. The company's UK headquarters in Farnborough employs around 1,500 staff, with the rest spread around a services office in Bristol, and design and Symbian offices in London.

Nokia's spokesperson said the cuts were "focused on a scaling process", adding that "no specific groups or business units… are being shut down as a result of this announcement".

The company announced the closure of its Turku site in November in the wake of disappointing profits.

Carolina Milanesi, research director at analyst house Gartner, told ZDNet UK on Tuesday that the number of job cuts announced on Tuesday by Nokia was "obviously big… but not worrying, given the size of Nokia".

"In this current market, obviously cost is very important," Milanesi said. "Nokia has been very good at trying to limit costs as best they can."

Results from Gartner published last week showed that Nokia remained the number-one smartphone maker in the world, but its lead was slipping as rivals such as Apple, HTC and RIM gained market share in recent months.

Original article: Nokia to lay off 1,700 workers from ZDNet UK

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

Mark Crichard Doing business with citizen developers: Beware the legal pitfalls Legal Eye: Make sure your business is protected from potential hazards

Tim Ferguson How CIOs can achieve post-recession success Q&A: McKinsey & Company on living in the 'new normal' business world


  • Jobs
IS Service Desk Team Leader

We write business in 130 countries and have over 20 million customers around the globe. You will also be expected to remain hands on within the ...

Data Warehouse / Business Intelligence Business Analyst -London

International organisation & the business employs over 4000 people globally & has manufacturing sales & distribution sites in over 10 countries. The ...

SharePoint / MOSS 2010 Developer

Lead SharePoint / MOSS 2007 Application Developer - Develop specific SharePoint 2010 products, Global Projects up to 2million - 1 Stage interview, ...

Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: