By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
11/30/01 10:26 AM PT
So far this year, 98,522 jobs have been lost in
dot-com sectors, more than double the number of cuts made
during 2000, when 41,515 positions were eliminated.
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The number of dot-com job losses fell to 2,901 in November,
continuing a downward trend that began last summer, according to a report
released Friday by Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
The November losses are 40 percent below the level of Internet jobs cuts during
October, when 4,840 positions
were slashed, and 67 percent below the nearly 9,000 jobs cut
during the same month in 2000.
Unlike recent months, when online travel and other sectors
hit hard by the September 11th terrorist attacks laid off large
numbers of workers, the November cuts were more diffuse.
"No single sector saw devastating cuts in November,"
said John A. Challenger, chief executive officer of the Chicago, Illinois-based
executive placement firm. "The technology sector had significant
job cuts, but that is a trend that has been evident for quite some time."
In fact, the technology sector, which includes software firms
that support e-commerce, led all dot-com cuts with 1,614 layoffs .
Yahoo! to You
Portals ranked second, with 400 job cuts, all of them directly tied to
cutbacks announced on November 16th
by Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO).
Challenger recorded 100 job cuts in the online retail sector,
348 in financial services, 291 in online media, 113 in consumer
services and 35 in the online healthcare field.
In fact, Yahoo! had the distinction of being the only major
Internet player to lay off a large number of workers in
November. By comparison, Monster.com, Travelocity
(Nasdaq: TVLY), PurchasePro (Nasdaq: PPRO) and
CommerceOne (Nasdaq: CMRC) all cut workers in October.
Big Year
The job loss tide has stemmed since a deluge early in
2001. Cuts peaked in April, when more than 17,000 layoffs
were recorded, and have been falling steadily since, with one
exception: Layoffs spiked in October as companies reassessed
their outlooks following the terrorist attacks on the United States.
While the trends are good, the numbers continue to
pile up. So far this year, 98,522 jobs have been lost in
dot-com sectors, more than double the number of cuts made
during 2000, when 41,515 positions were eliminated.
Challenger said it is likely that by the end of the year, 100,000
dot-com workers will have been shown the door.
"Dot-coms are still being affected by loss of online advertising
revenue and the hesitancy of financial backers, making
this industry all the more tenuous," Challenger said.
Finding Bottom
But like other analysts, Challenger remained optimistic
that e-commerce and other dot-com sectors will get a
fourth-quarter shot in the arm.
"It is hoped that the holiday season will provide a much
needed boost to this struggling sector," he said. "Due to
terrorism concerns, more holiday shoppers may decide to
stay at home this year and increase online shopping."