Bouygues Telecom cuts workforce by nearly 20%

PARIS, FRANCE: Struggling French telecommunications company Bouygues Telecom said it will cut nearly 20% of its workforce in a move to help it survive in the struggling sector.
Bouygues Telecom's Olivier Roussat says it will cut its workforce by 1,516 people in an effort to reduce costs. Image:
Bouygues Telecom's Olivier Roussat says it will cut its workforce by 1,516 people in an effort to reduce costs. Image: French Web

The loss-making subsidiary of the Bouygues conglomerate, which also has interests in construction and television, said in a statement it planned to shed 1,516 jobs out of 9,000 as part of a restructuring plan aimed at ensuring its future.

Like other mobile phone operators, Bouygues has struggled since 2012 when Free, the brainchild of technology tycoon Xavier Niel, entered the telecommunications market with low-price services, setting in motion upheaval in the sector and a brutal price war that has benefited consumers.

It attempted to consolidate its position in the sector earlier this year by bidding for another mobile phone operator SFR, but Bouygues lost out to cable and fibre-optic network operator Numericable.

The firm then held talks with Orange, formerly the French state monopoly France Telecom, and Iliad, Free's parent company.

But Bouygues Telecom head Olivier Roussat said those discussions had been unsuccessful, prompting a drop of around seven percent in the value of shares in the company and in Iliad.

Source: AFP via I-Net Bridge


 
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