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Digg to Cut 10 Percent of Employees; Says It Will Try to Be Profitable in 2009 (The Entire Blog Post)

Digg, the San Francisco-based news discovery service and one of Silicon Valley’s more prominent start-ups of late, said in its company blog today that it would cut its 75-person workforce.

A company spokeswoman told BoomTown the cut would be about 10 percent, but would not give out a specific number of employees to be let go.

In addition, Digg noted it would be aiming to cut costs and be profitable in 2009. It will also be hiring a direct sales team.

In other words, revenue does matter too, Web 2.0!

Here’s the entire blog post on the layoffs and more, by CEO Jay Adelson:

Brief update on Digg

Hey all,

Wanted to reach out to folks with an update on Digg and our priorities for 2009 as well as address some of the recent speculation about our business.

As we’ve often stated over the past couple of months, given the current economic climate, we’ve made the decision to take a more conservative approach to our expansion plans and aggressively focus on reaching profitability within the year.

This means we’ll be taking proactive measures to manage our costs including a headcount reduction in certain areas that are less core to this year’s objectives while continuing to hire for roles that will help build on our leadership position and get us to profitability faster. This includes hiring a direct sales team, in addition to other targeted hires in 2009.

As part of our aggressive path to profitability within the year, I also wanted to take this opportunity to highlight some of the major priorities for the company:

• Rolling out new features to grow and engage our community
• Building on our advertising infrastructure
• Building on our successful partnership with Microsoft
• Ongoing sponsorship opportunities
• Ongoing publisher and trade partnerships

I’m confident that with commitment and focus on these priorities, Digg will be an even stronger company in 2009 and will continue to create innovative features for our more than 35 million community members. I want to thank you all for your continued support and commitment–helping us achieve our vision of the democratization of media, and revolutionizing the way people consume and discover information online.

Thanks,
Jay

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  • Sam Harrison
    the real memo:

    Hey, digg is no longer the buzz company it was 2 years ago when we had a lock on news voting.

    now everyone has the ability, even sorry old yahoo.

    we should have sold a year back but our board said no.

    now i'm holding a has-been company. it didn't help that a kabal of users made themselves into the 'digg mafia' to hype their own stories.

    later, i'm heading back to tech tv.

    kev
  • Duane Smeryage
    With the overwhelming amount of liberal content on Digg, they should prepare to go the way the rest of the far-left media has headed. If you are employed there, save your money and look for alternatives elsewhere. The future can be seen without a crystal ball.
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Kara Swisher started covering digital issues for The Wall Street Journal's San Francisco bureau in 1997 and also wrote the BoomTown column about the sector. With Walt Mossberg, she co-produces and co-hosts D: All Things Digital, a major high-tech and media conference. Read more »

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