MySpace to cut 300 international positions and close offices

ByABC News
June 23, 2009, 7:36 PM

LOS ANGELES -- Social-networking site MySpace said Tuesday it plans to cut 300 jobs, or two-thirds of its overseas work force, in an effort to rein in costs and focus on countries where it has many users and better business opportunities.

The move comes a week after the News Corp. unit said it would cut 420 jobs in the U.S., or nearly 30% of its domestic work force. Combined, the cuts will reduce MySpace's employee base by nearly 40% to about 1,150.

"Our goal to tap into as many international markets as possible drove us to create too many offices around the globe, and with them came inefficiencies," Chief Executive Owen Van Natta, a former executive at rival Facebook, said in a memo sent to employees Tuesday.

Van Natta, 39, started in his new job in April with a mandate to revitalize the site, which has seen its advertising revenues fall and its user growth stagnate. Critics have said its features have become outdated even as it ramped up a music service with the major recording labels last fall.

MySpace said it would close at least four of its 15 overseas offices, while focusing on London, Berlin and Sydney as the main regional hubs. MySpace has 34 localized versions in 28 countries.

MySpace China and MySpace Japan, a joint venture with Japanese Internet company Softbank, would not be affected by the plan, but the company is reviewing its offices in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, France, India, Italy, Mexico, Russia, Sweden, and Spain.

The company has been trying to trim its payroll, bringing its staffing level more in line with its more popular rival, Facebook. As of May, Facebook said it had about 850 employees worldwide, the vast majority in the United States. Before the latest cuts, MySpace employed nearly 1,900 worldwide.

Recent data from tracking firm comScore shows Facebook has caught up with MySpace in monthly U.S. visitors for the first time, with about 70 million each.

MySpace has had difficulty growing its user base, which stands at about 125 million worldwide. Meanwhile Facebook has said that its usage has doubled to more than 200 million in less than a year.