Dell ‘To Cut At Least 2,000 Jobs’ Post-EMC Buy

Dell Technologies is to reduce its staff by at least 2,000 people in the wake of its completed acquisition of EMC.

The reductions would affect 2,000 to 3,000 people and are to take place later this year, according to unnamed people familiar with the plans cited by Bloomberg.

Dell-EMC290x195

Wide-ranging cuts

The cuts are to affect areas including supply chain and general administrative positions and some marketing jobs, the people said.

The deal saw Dell, a major manufacturer of PCs and servers, acquire EMC, which makes data-storage and data centre products, in a deal valued at about $60 billion (£45 billion), forming the world’s largest privately held technology company.

Industry observers see the two companies as largely complementary, but Dell has acknowledged that there are areas of overlap which would be expected to result in job cuts.

However, the company has said its aim with the merger is to increase sales, with cost reductions seen as secondary.

“As is common with deals of this size, there will be some overlaps we will need to manage and where some employee reduction will occur,” Dell said. “We will do everything possible to minimise the impact on jobs. We expect revenue gains will outweigh any cost savings, and revenue growth drives employment growth.”

One-stop shop

The deal from a long-term slowdown in the core markets of both Dell and EMC, as buying patterns shift to mobile devices and the less expensive hardware used in cloud computing data centres.

The combined company is intended to create a one-stop shop for business technology, Dell has said.

Dell Technologies chairman and chief executive Michael Dell said earlier this week that the company’s private status will allow it to invest in new areas including connected devices, otherwise known as the Internet of Things (IoT), as well as new cloud computing, cyber security and predictive analytics technologies.

“We are at the dawn of the next industrial revolution,” Dell said. “We have the products, services, talent and global scale to be a catalyst for change and guide customers, large and small, on their digital journey.”

Rivals including HP have argued the merger presents an opportunity for them, since its complexity is likely to slow Dell down in the near term.

Dell faces a difficult task in integrating a combined staff of 140,000 people and maintaining the $40bn in debt raised to carry out the transaction, according to industry observers.

Do you know all about Dell? Take our quiz.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

France Fines Apple Over Ad Tracking Feature

Apple fined 150m euros over App Tracking Transparency feature that it says abuses Apple's market…

12 hours ago

OpenAI To Release Open-Weight AI Model

OpenAI to release customisable open-weight model in coming months as it faces pressure from open-source…

12 hours ago

Samsung AI Fridge Creates Shopping Lists, Adjusts AC

Samsung's Bespoke AI-powered fridge monitors food to create shopping lists, displays TikTok videos, locates misplaced…

13 hours ago

Huawei Consumer Revenues Surge Amidst Smartphone Comeback

Huawei sees 38 percent jump in consumer revenues as its smartphone comeback continues to gather…

13 hours ago

China Approves First ‘Flying Car’ Licences

In world-first, China approves commercial flights for EHang autonomous passenger drone, paving way for imminent…

14 hours ago

Microsoft Shutters Shanghai Lab In Latest China Pullback

Microsoft closes down IoT and AI lab it operated in Shanghai tech district in latest…

14 hours ago