Hiring to slow as Apple cuts back

Apple Inc. will cut back on hiring for some divisions after selling fewer iPhones than expected and missing its revenue forecast for the holiday quarter, according to people familiar with the matter.

Tim Cook, Apple's chief executive officer, made the disclosure to employees earlier this month in a meeting the day after he penned a letter to investors about the company's recent struggles, particularly in China. During the meeting, Cook was asked if the company would impose a hiring freeze in response. He said he didn't believe that was the solution. Instead, Cook said some divisions would reduce hiring, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters.

Cook said he has yet to fully determine which divisions would cut back on hiring, but said that key groups such as Apple's artificial-intelligence team would continue to add employees at a strong pace.

An Apple spokesman didn't respond to a request for comment. Apple has been on a hiring spree in the past decade, but the pace of head-count growth has slowed in recent years. The company added about 9,000 workers in its most-recent fiscal year for a total 132,000. A year earlier, Apple added roughly 7,000 employees.

The hiring pullback won't affect plans to open new offices in Austin, Texas, nor expand in the Los Angeles area, where Apple is building out its original video-content team, the CEO also said.

After Cook's talk with employees, some Apple senior vice presidents held separate meetings with vice presidents, senior directors and other managers in their groups to emphasize that the iPhone sales slowdown is an opportunity for new innovation, according to one of the people.

On Jan. 2, Apple cut revenue guidance for the holiday quarter to $84 billion from between $89 billion and $93 billion. That was the first time Apple reduced its sales forecast in almost two decades. The company blamed the lower outlook on weaker iPhone sales because of economic and industry head winds, mostly in China.

The Cupertino, Calif.-based technology giant also said iPhone upgrades were not as strong as expected in some developed markets because of fewer carriers subsidizing phone purchases, higher prices and consumers holding on to older iPhones longer because replacing the battery is cheaper.

In a memo to employees after the announcement, Cook told employees that he wouldn't use "external forces" as an excuse. "This moment gives us an opportunity to learn and to take action," he added.

While lower iPhone sales dragged down revenue, Cook noted earlier this month that the company's services business would grow to $10.8 billion in sales during the holiday quarter. In his meeting with employees, Cook stressed the importance of services to the company's future.

In recent months, Apple has signaled a shift in its services strategy, opening up Apple Music to Amazon devices, adding the ability to stream media directly from iPhones and iPads to TV sets and releasing an iTunes video-streaming app for Samsung TVs.

Information for this article was contributed by Ian King of Bloomberg News.

Business on 01/17/2019

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