Twitch is laying off 500 employees as the Amazon-owned livestreaming giant struggles to balance the massive financial burden of maintaining its global infrastructure. The move, which represents a significant portion of its workforce, comes as the platform continues to face intense pressure to reach profitability while supporting high-bandwidth video delivery.
The High Price of Real-Time Streaming
Twitch faces steep operating costs to support livestream content at such a large scale. In a 2022 blog post, Twitch President Dan Clancy revealed that each high-volume streamer incurs approximately $1,000 in monthly costs for the company, largely due to Amazon Web Service’s interactive video rates.
“Delivering high definition, low latency, always available live video to nearly every corner of the world is expensive,” Clancy noted, highlighting the technical and financial hurdles inherent in the company’s business model.
Global Challenges and Market Exits
The workforce reduction follows a series of strategic retreats aimed at curbing expenditures. Notably, Twitch announced it would shut down its operations in Korea, citing network fees that the company deemed “prohibitively expensive,” further underscoring the platform’s volatility regarding regional infrastructure costs.
Monetization and the Long-Term Strategy
These layoffs also arrive at a time when the company is under scrutiny for its evolving creator economy. Twitch’s financial leadership has been vocal about the revenue split controversy, aiming to shift the platform’s monetization model toward a more sustainable long-term game, despite ongoing pushback from the creator community regarding these fiscal adjustments.
