ByteDance is cutting 450 jobs, about 9% of its Indonesian workforce, after merging TikTok Shop with Tokopedia. The $1.5B deal aims to cut costs and streamline operations. This is part of a broader strategy to eliminate duplicate roles and comply with local regulations.
Chinese social media giant ByteDance is cutting 450 jobs in its Indonesian e-commerce arm. This reduction represents 9% of the Indonesian unit's workforce. The layoffs start this month. This follows ByteDance's January merger of its TikTok Shop with local rival Tokopedia.
The $1.5B deal with GoTo Group’s Tokopedia is part of ByteDance’s strategy to streamline operations and cut costs in Indonesia. This region is ByteDance’s largest e-commerce market in Southeast Asia. The competition here is fierce, with players like Sea’s Shopee and Alibaba’s Lazada.
Indonesia's new trade regulations, introduced last October, protect local e-commerce and small businesses from large foreign companies. This merger helps ByteDance comply with these rules. The unusual pact allowed ByteDance to restart its Indonesian business while reducing operational redundancies.
ByteDance’s restructuring is not limited to Indonesia. The company, valued at $220B by Hurun Research Institute, has been cutting jobs globally. Last month, TikTok, also owned by ByteDance, let go hundreds of employees in its marketing and operations teams worldwide. This reflects a broader trend among Chinese Big Tech firms like Alibaba and Tencent, which are also cutting jobs to shore up their bottom lines.
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