MobileNews

OnePlus lays off employees in Europe less than two weeks after OnePlus 8 launch

OnePlus launched its latest flagship phones, the OnePlus 8 and OnePlus 8 Pro, less than two weeks ago, but the Chinese phone maker is now laying off employees in regional offices throughout Europe, as first reported by Engadget.

The layoffs do not appear to be coronavirus-related, and in a blog post Saturday, Tuomas Lampen, head of strategy for OnePlus Europe said 20 employees in three offices were affected. “We have decided to make some changes to the current organizational structure within Europe to better streamline our operations while continuing to meet the needs of our growing community,” according to the post. That strategy includes hiring in the Nordic and Benelux regions, and making “organizational changes” in Germany, France, and the UK.

Helsinki is now going to be the new European HQ for OnePlus, according to Engadget, with the prior operation being based mostly in London.

This may have been a long time coming; new OnePlus 8 models in the UK can only be bought from one carrier, the international provider Three (although unlocked models bough from the company itself will still work on carriers like EE and O2). OnePlus does not appear to have strategic relationships with other carriers that operate in the UK for the OnePlus 8 line or upcoming models.

UPDATE April 25th, 4:05PM ET: Adds the number of affected employees and statement from OnePlus.

Check out the latest Apple iPhones at great prices from Gizmofashion – our recommended retail partner.


Author: Nick Statt.
Source: Theverge

Related posts
GamingNews

Palworld Hits an Incredible 40 Million Players 2.5 Years After Early Access Launch, and With 1.0 Right Around the Corner

GamingNews

Microsoft Reportedly Plans to Make More of Its Best Games Console Exclusive So People Have a Reason to Buy an Xbox — So What Could Skip PlayStation?

GamingNews

Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced Review

CryptoNews

Coinbase UK License Marks Major Step Toward Bringing ‘Everything Exchange’ to Life