The Guardian
trending topics
Close Box

Our news

Yes, it’s true: We are joining GigaOM...


More Layoffs: Heavy.com Shedding 12 More Employees

  • Comments Comments (View)
  • Text Size: A A

imageHeavy.com, the NYC-based online video site aimed at young men, has laid off about 20 more employees, after doing a round of cuts in June, when it laid off 25 employees. Back then it had about 80 employees after the cuts then…now, with some attrition since then, they are down to around 57, the company tells me. The news comes as the company has recently spun off the online video ad network division Husky Media into a separate company. The troubles of Heavy have been brewing for a while, as it has tried to distinguish itself from the slew of other video players—both new and bigger media companies—in the market…some other players in the market have also questioned its traffic acquisition tactics over the years. The company has raised at least five rounds of funding before, including a $20 million round from Polaris last year.

SEE ALSO: Heavy Laying Off About 20 Percent of Staff; Separating Ad Network Into Another Company

The company’s official statement on the new layoffs: “Given the current economic downturn and related uncertainty in its industry, Heavy today reduced its staff by 14%. With its premium Heavy Men’s Network platform serving 23M young men per month in the US alone, and profitable International operations in Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia, Heavy is strongly positioned for any dip in the advertising market.”

The news was first reported by SAI.

Oct 17, 2008 2:07 PM ET

Posted In: Jobs & Layoffs, Social Media, Technologies / Formats, Broadband, heavy, layoffs, simon assaad

(Page 1 of 1)


The Bestsellers

From iTunes and YouTube to Facebook and Kindle, the most popular content on the web, free and paid.

Kindle (Free) Kindle (Free)
1. My Temporary Life
2. Sleeping with Paris
3. Revenge (A Travis Mays Novel)
4. Addicted To Love
5. Burden of the Soul
See The Other Bestsellers »

Jobs RSS Job Listings

Social Standing

Which media brands are getting a lift from Tweeters and bloggers right now -- and which are getting panned?

"Sentiment" Scores for All the Companies »

Sponsors

Staff