Business Insider to Lay Off Around 8% of Staff

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Business Insider lay off around 8% of its staff on Thursday, according to a blog post from CEO Barbara Peng sent to employees Thursday morning.

“We closed out last year with a plan in place, a clear target audience, and a vision,” the statement read. “This year is about making it happen and focusing our company and efforts towards this future.”

According to Peng, Business Insider has already “begun to refocus teams and invest in areas that drive outsize value for our core audience.”

However, “this also means we need to scale back in some areas of our organization,” Peng continued.

“As part of this new direction, today we are announcing we are reducing the size of our team — a change that impacts about 8% of our people,” the CEO wrote.

“We’re saying goodbye to wonderful colleagues who have helped build Business Insider into what it is today,” the post continued. “We are deeply grateful for their passion, energy, and teamwork, and we appreciate them.”

Peng noted that staffers departing the outlet today will receive a minimum of 13 weeks pay and medical coverage through May. Business Insider is additionally offering career support services to those impacted.

“We’re committed to building an enduring and sustainable Business Insider for the coming years and beyond,” Peng concluded.

The layoffs come in the wake of tumult over Business Insider’s reporting on MIT academic and entrepreneur Neri Oxman, accusing her of plagiarism. Oxman’s husband, hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, went nuclear on Business Insider as a result, accusing the outlet of targeting Oxman because of Ackman’s criticism of Harvard president Claudine Gay.

After a review, Peng defended Business Insider’s reporting. “There was no unfair bias or personal, political, and/or religious motivation in the pursuit of the stories. The stories were newsworthy and Neri Oxman, who has a public profile as a prominent intellectual and has been a subject of and participant in media coverage, is a fair subject,” Peng said.

The Insider layoffs also come at a crucial time for media. The Los Angeles Times just underwent significant layoffs, workers at Conde Nast outlets walked out on the job this week to protest upcoming layoffs, and on Thursday workers at Forbes staged a walkout to protest stalled negotiations and New York Daily News also organized a walkout ahead of proposed layoffs.

The post Business Insider to Lay Off Around 8% of Staff appeared first on TheWrap.