Saturday, 2024 April 20

Oyo fires “hundreds” in the US amid global restructuring and COVID-19

SoftBank-backed hospitality giant Oyo’s struggle in the US continues as it recently had to let go of a substantial chunk of its workforce in the country.

Juggling between restructuring its global operations’ that it kicked off late last year to become profitable and surviving the COVID-19 pandemic that has crushed the hotel demand worldwide, Oyo has ended up with no choice but to hand over pink slips to its employees in the US.

Local media Economic Times (ET), citing sources, reported that Oyo has finally laid off “hundreds of employees” in America across the division like sales, business development, and HR over the last three weeks.

This is Oyo’s second round of layoffs in the US. In late January, the Indian hotel startup reportedly fired about 360 people, almost one-third of its total American workforce. At the time, the company had already let go of “5% of its 12,000 employees in China partly due to non-performance and dismissed 12% of its 10,000 staff in India,” as per a Bloomberg report. In an email announcing the layoffs in its American team, Oyo Chief Operating Officer Abhinav Sinha had said that the company’s new mantra was going to be “sustainable growth and profitability,” which would “help the company embark on the next phase.”

Since then the situation has worsened as the coronavirus outbreak turned into a pandemic, and Oyo, like every other hotel chain, has seen its business crumble in the US. The ET report, citing sources, said the company has reduced its investment in the US hotels to one-fourth of what it was spending earlier.

“Oyo is expecting a long lull in the US and is laying off a lot of people in its corporate division along with some hotel employees. Finance and operations are very thinly manned and others are being asked to go,” the ET report said citing a person familiar with the matter. “Costs there are very high and the leadership thinks accounted cash flows will go out of order if costs are not brought down drastically.”

An Oyo spokesperson told ET that the “pandemic has impacted the hospitality industry at a global scale and Oyo is not immune to it,” and that “it would shortly announce further details as we finalize specific decisions to ensure Oyo’s long-term success.”

However, the trouble for Oyo is much deeper than the steep slump in demand due to travel restrictions across the globe to prevent the COVID-19 spread. According to the report, an employee who was sacked in the first week of April said Oyo has been struggling to continue giving high salaries in the US and the lack of transparency with American hotel partners has compounded the problems for the company.

Oyo has been trying to turn things around in the US where it entered in February 2019. Since late March, the company has been offering its rooms for free to American medical and healthcare professionals fighting coronavirus.

Although the move might not benefit Oyo immediately, it is likely to improve its brand image, cement its relationship with the US authorities, and the healthcare community.

Moulishree Srivastava
Moulishree Srivastava
In-depth, analytical and explainer stories and interviews on technology, internet economy, investments, climate tech and sustainability. Coverage of business strategies, trends in startup and VC ecosystems and cross-border stories capturing the influence of SEA, China and Japan on the local startup industry.
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