Why Is Google Cutting Jobs in Its Cloud Unit? – Market Realist

Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) is cutting about four dozen positions in its cloud computing division, according to CNBC. The job cuts are part of a restructuring plan to improve operations in the cloud unit.

Under the stewardship of Thomas Kurian, Googles cloud unit has focused a lot of its attention and resources on winning over large enterprise customers. Kurian joined Google from Oracle (NASDAQ:ORCL) in late 2018. He started in his new role at Google in January 2019.

Notably, the job cuts come at a time when Google has been on a hiring spree for the cloud business. Recently, most of Googles new hires have ended up at the division. The companys cloud hiring has mainly been for marketing and technical teams.

Google aims to triple its cloud salesforce as it races to catch market leaders Amazon and Microsoft. Last year, Kurian disclosed that Google lagged the market leaders in terms of its salesforce. He said that the companys cloud salesforce was just about one-tenth of Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Microsofts (NASDAQ:MSFT) salesforce.

Currently, Amazon dominates the global cloud market with a 33% market share. Microsoft is second with an 18% market share. Meanwhile, Google is third with about an 8.0% market share.

Google has set its sights on becoming one of the worlds top cloud companies in the next five years. The company is very focused on a big break in the cloud market. Google has contemplated exiting the cloud business if it doesnt become one of the top-two vendors within its target period.

In addition to expanding its cloud salesforce, Google wants to equip its cloud team with executives who can help it win over large enterprise customers.

For example, Kurian worked for more than two decades at Oracle before he joined Google. Oracle is one of the global leaders in the enterprise software market. Google has also staffed its cloud division with executives from enterprise software giants Microsoft and SAP SE (NYSE:SAP).

The companys cloud business generated $8.9 billion in revenue in 2019, which indicates tremendous growth from $5.8 billion in revenue in 2018. Some experts think that the companys cloud sales could hit $38 billion in 2025.

Google parent Alphabet counts on the cloud business in addition to other ventures like Waymo to diversify its revenue sources. Currently, advertising sales contribute nearly 90% of Alphabets revenue, which indicates a potentially risky revenue concentration considering the changing advertising market.

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Why Is Google Cutting Jobs in Its Cloud Unit? - Market Realist

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