Los Angeles Times

Juul may cut over half of workforce

- By Angelica LaVito LaVito writes for Bloomberg.

E-cigarette giant Juul Labs Inc. could cut more than half its workforce, according to a person familiar with the company’s plans, while it weighs exiting more European and Asian markets — further signs of the once high-flying company’s deteriorat­ing fortunes.

Juul aims to reduce its workforce to about 1,000 employees, down from the current 2,200, the person said. A Juul spokesman said that no final decisions have been made and that the company will continue to evaluate its options.

The San Francisco company announced plans to lay off more workers in a Wednesday message to employees from Chief Executive K.C. Crosthwait­e.

The email said Juul is still in the explorator­y phase and didn’t detail how many employees will be cut or how many countries it may exit. Juul has already cut its workforce by about 40% and halted global expansion.

The Wall Street Journal first reported news of the changes.

A health crisis surroundin­g vaping that was later linked to faulty cannabis products sent the already embattled Juul into a tailspin last year. U.S. regulators blamed an epidemic of teen vaping on the company.

Juul has since tried reorientin­g itself, shuffling its executive ranks, eliminatin­g sweeter flavors critics said targeted younger customers, and focusing on a regulatory review that will determine whether its products can stay in the U.S. market.

Crosthwait­e said in his email that Juul will exit markets that don’t generate sufficient returns and will meet with “key stakeholde­rs” before entering a country in the future. The company has been pursuing that approach in Japan, where it hired a former pharmaceut­ical executive to lead its efforts.

The company will use its resources to develop new technologi­es and focus on its core markets, Crosthwait­e said.

In July, Juul filed an applicatio­n with the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion to keep selling its e-cigarettes. That applicatio­n is being reviewed.

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? CEO K.C. CROSTHWAIT­E wrote to employees that Juul will use its resources to focus on its core markets.
Susan Walsh Associated Press CEO K.C. CROSTHWAIT­E wrote to employees that Juul will use its resources to focus on its core markets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States