To say it’s been a disastrous few months for Netflix would seem like a bit of an understatement.



NurPhoto | Getty Images

The company’s Q1 2022 earnings report, which was released late last month, sent the company plummeting 26% in premarket trading despite a 10% increase in quarterly revenue.

The culprit was the perfect storm of a record loss of more than 200,000 subscribers, a crackdown (and subsequent pushback) on password sharing, subscription price hikes and the withdrawal of billionaire investor Bill Ackman, who put an estimated $1.1 billion into the company just three months prior.

All of this culminated in the company being slammed with a class-action lawsuit alleging that the company misled investors as to how bad the subscriber situation really was and a couple of dozen employees being laid off from the company’s fan subsidiary, Tudum.

Unfortunately, it seems that the Tudum layoffs were only the beginning of the streaming giant’s attempt to cut costs and salvage losses, as it announced Wednesday that 150 full-time employees and more than 70 part-time and freelance employees will be getting the boot.

Related: What’s Going on With Netflix? Everything You Need to Know About the Company’s Massive Fall

“As we explained [in reporting Q1] earnings, our slowing revenue growth means we are also having to slow our cost growth as a company,” a Netflix representative confirmed to Variety. “So sadly, we are letting around 150 employees go today, mostly U.S.-based. These changes are primarily driven by business needs rather than individual performance, which makes them especially tough as none of us want to say goodbye to such great colleagues. We’re working hard to support them through this very difficult transition.”

These widespread layoffs account for around 2% of Netflix’s total workforce in the U.S. and affect all departments, with the part-time employees being based in animation and freelance positions in social media and publishing.

Many laid-off employees took to social media and alleged that those leading diversity initiatives and employees from marginalized communities were among the majority of those being let go.

Related: Unsubscribe from Spending: Netflix Tells Employees to ‘Spend Our Members’ Money Wisely’

Netflix cut all of its diversity departments including Strong Black Lead, Asian American-focused Golden, Latinx-focused Con Todo, and LGBTQ-focused Most pic.twitter.com/GqebuZKFRB

A lot of the “diversity” that worked at Netflix were let go today it seems like as I scroll on social. A former Netflix writer who was part of the layoffs said, “Diversity and the editorial staff are the first on the chopping block when it’s time to make a sweep.” #Netflixlayoffs

— Doc Louallen (@LouallenDoc) May 18, 2022

Netflix does better than a lot of companies at their DEI numbers, BUT the layoffs didn’t touch the least diverse part of the company: the tech side. Are they tech, or entertainment? Both—the diversity is on the creative side, otherwise they look like any other tech company.

— Chief Esparza (@ChiefEsparza) May 18, 2022

Y’all look over at Netflix: they are so committed to Diversify and Inclusion that at the thought of losing subs and profits all their diversity initiatives went first in times of layoffs. When honestly Strong Black Lead kept Black audiences watching in such a thoughtful way. pic.twitter.com/zDwYFf794B

— Ho Cake McMuffins (@ho_cake) May 18, 2022

Netflix did not immediately respond to Entrepreneur’s request for comment.

The streaming giant was down an astounding 62% year over year as of late Wednesday morning.



  • These Co-Founders Are Using ‘Quiet Confidence’ to Flip the Script on Cutthroat Startup Culture and Make Their Mark on a $46 Billion Industry



  • My 7-Year-Old Daughter Started Selling Eggs. Here’s What She Taught Me About Running a Startup.



  • Why You Need to Become an Inclusive Leader (and How to Do It)



  • Career Transitions You Can Make in Your 40s and 50s



  • Billionaire Naveen Jain Is an Expert at Disrupting Fields He Has No Experience In. His Secret Sauce for Building Multi-Million Dollar Companies? ‘You Have to Come as Naive.’



  • 4 Principles to Develop Next-Level Leadership at Your Company



  • This Filipino American Founder Is Disrupting the Beverage Aisle by Introducing New Flavors to the Crowded Bubbly Water Market