It looks like Monday will be when we find out if how many staff go from eBay’s offices globally and the UK/European offices specifically. Last month reports started to emerge that eBay was poised to cut 1,500 jobs, or 10% of its workforce globally, according to an article in Barron’s weekly. It cited a report published by investment-research firm Wedge Partners.
My sources tell me the process will start on Monday next week and that the lay-offs will take in staff at PayPal, but not Skype, the eBay-owned property. The move may be a short-term one to please a turbulent stock market. An official eBay spoksperson told me today: “We don’t comment on rumours.”
However, if the lay-offs go ahead, the significance of this is that eBay may end up shutting down some local offices in Europe (though almost certainly not the sites).
Having local eBay offices in Europe is often a good thing for start-ups as eBay is not afraid to advertise on new sites or integrate new services on the platform from start-ups. Not to mention that these local offices will often evangelise e-business to SME’s and consumers. We’ll see on Monday, but it’s not looking good. eBay has just one job going in London right now, despite a significant presence.
In adjacent but related news today VC and M&A investment is down across the whole “digital media” sector according to a quarterly report by industry analysts at StrategyEye. Specifically, they say, advertising, mobile content, gaming, social media, search and online media are all affected.
The first three months of this year saw a 38% decline in the number of deals, and a 81% decline in the value of M&A and VC investment in the digital media sector. The decline in venture capital activity in terms of number of deals was down 48% to 151 and the value of the deals was down 58% to USD1.64bn. In the M&A market, activity declined (by number of deals) from 49% to 106 and the value of deals by 82% to USD36bn. StrategyEye tracked 121 M&A, 161 Venture Capital and 253 Partnership deals across the sector in Q3 2008, at a total value of USD45bn.
What does all this add up to? A much, much colder climate for startups and existing online players. However, it is usually downturns like this when the real companies start to emerge and fight their way through the tough times. Historically, by the time things improve, they are in a good position to race ahead of the pack. So, good news for some, especially those who have money to play with over the next two or so years. There is also another plausible trends – eBay start with payoffs may start to swell the startup ranks.

Burrr, time to dust off the recession coat. Last time I had it out was pop of dot-com bubble, when I was doing media, communication, publishing, tech deals. That was a great lesson. This recession gonna be much worse (no new bubble on horizon to bail out unless government debt and printing presses, but that has own set of probs). But out of each recession comes great opportunities and this will be no different. Good time to be a bootstrapping startup, IMHO. Bad time to have a burn rate. Buh-bye is what happens there.
Well with all the changes they have made it is not a wonder they are not doing as well as expected!
Last night at the London PHP Meetup a recruiter gave a speech about market trends and climate for PHP developers and despite the economic uncertainties (I’m being very gentle here) the demand for PHP developers is still quite bullish and doesn’t seem to be expected to slow down in the short term, especially for media companies. It’s interesting to see what will happen. Hopefully a decrease in the level of salaries, as I heard some really crazy expectations lately.
http://www.thestreet.com/story/10440533/1/fast-money-pops-and-drops-ebay-no-way.html?puc=googlefi&cm_ven=GOOGLEFI&cm_cat=FREE&cm_ite=NA
They just took a hit with the downgrade too. Things need to be changed at the Auction Giant before more and more people jump ship and migrate over to big players [such as Amazon] and new up and comers [such as Wigix]. And to think, 10 years ago we thought all shopping was going to be done on eBay in the future.
There are still lots of high paying jobs posted on employment sites:
http://www.linkedin.com (networking)
http://www.indeed.com (aggregated listings)
http://www.realmatch.com (matches you to jobs)
Those folks will find other jobs