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Thousands of Amazon workers woke up Wednesday morning to a brutal email from their employer informing them their role had 'been eliminated' effective immediately.
Around 18,000 staff were let go in the latest round of job cuts first announced by CEO Andy Jassy in November.
Soon after the Seattle-based company sent out the emails, many employees' access to work computers and offices was also cut off, Business Insider revealed.
'Unfortunately, your role has been eliminated,' the email from an HR executive within the e-commerce giant read. 'You are no longer required to perform any work on Amazon's behalf effective immediately,' it later added.
The layoffs are the latest in a series of cost cutting moves by Amazon and the wider tech industry - and come just days after Microsoft announced plans to cut 10,000 jobs, mirroring similar moves at Meta and Twitter.
The cuts were first announced by Amazon CEO Andy Jassy in November
Amazon is just one of several tech companies who have made major cuts in recent weeks and months
The email sent out to Amazon employees, obtained by Business Insider, came from Beth Galetti, the senior vice president of People Experience & Technology.
The HR boss said the cut jobs are 'not a decision that was made lightly' and called the cost-cutting move a 'difficult step.'
Five employees who spoke to Insider shared the email in its entirety as well as details surrounding the layoff, including how some employees immediately lost access to their office badges and work computers.
The workers did not wish to be named but the outlet said it had 'verified their identity.'
'Everyone is pretty upset,' one of the former-Amazon workers told Insider. 'We just woke up to an email today,' they continued in disbelief.
The email came from Beth Galetti, senior vice president of people experience and technology
The employees were told they will only receive updates from the company through non-Amazon devices going forward
The employees said their work email addresses and the app Amazon uses for videoconferencing to their own personal electronic devices
The large group of workers were told they will only receive updates from the company through non-Amazon devices going forward.
To make matters worse, the employees said that requires them to add their work email addresses and the app Amazon uses for videoconferencing to their own personal electronic devices.
'Our primary mode of communication will be through internal email on your non-Amazon device,' Galetti wrote in the email.
Amazon's spokesperson declined comment, according to Insider.
The company had previously announced the layoffs but declined to share a breakdown of exactly where the cuts would be a made.
But Insider reported that some workers spent time Wednesday compiling lists of employees who have lost their jobs and what team they worked in.
Galetti said employees affected will have follow up meetings with their team leaders. They will also receive their full pay and benefits for the next 60 days (90 days in New York state), plus an additional severance package.
Since November, the company has announced 18,000 jobs cut.
The trend matches those among other tech giants such as Microsoft and Meta.
Amazon's cuts reflect similar ones at companies like Microsoft and Meta
Microsoft on Wednesday began laying off 10,000 employees, nearly five percent of its workforce.
The most in-demand workers right now are blue collar employees, while white-collar workers have seen major job losses in the last year.
The phenomenon has been dubbed 'richcession' by those in the field.
In a memo to employees, CEO Satya Nadella said the layoffs would end in March.
In a memo to employees, CEO Satya Nadella said the layoffs, affecting nearly 5 percent of the workforce, would begin on Wednesday and conclude by the end of March
'We're living through times of significant change,' wrote Nadella, adding that 'parts of the world are in a recession and other parts are anticipating one.'
Nadella said customers wanted to 'optimize their digital spend to do more with less' and 'exercise caution as some parts of the world are in a recession and other parts are anticipating one.'
'While we are eliminating roles in some areas, we will continue to hire in key strategic areas,' he wrote.
One analyst with Wedbush Securities said the layoffs, while uncomfortable, are necessary for companies who want to see maintain profits.
'This is a rip the band-aid off moment to preserve margins and cut costs in a softer macro, a strategy the Street will continue to applaud,' said analyst Dan Ives.