UPS to Cut 12,000 Management Jobs Amid Falling Revenue
The company plans to save $1 billion, considers selling Coyote truck load brokerage business, and mandates return to office in 2024.
- UPS announced plans to cut 12,000 management jobs, approximately 14% of its full- and part-time managers, in an effort to save $1 billion amid falling revenue.
- The company is also considering selling off its Coyote truck load brokerage business.
- CEO Carol Tomé announced that the company will require workers to return to the office five days a week in 2024.
- UPS's consolidated revenue decreased by 9.3% last year, a decline blamed on the economic climate, lower demand for small packages, and higher costs associated with a new labor contract.
- The company plans to increasingly rely on technology, potentially replacing some of the laid-off managers with machinery.
























