Creative Technology cuts workforce

DriftKing

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creative during it heydays like year 1999-2003 time when mrt passes their building.

can see many big banners outside promoting geforce, tnt 2, and their nomad mp3 players.
They long sold the building to one of the big property liao. No longer own any building.
 

lampano

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In 2024, 548 tech firms terminated more than 150,000 employees. In the first two months of 2025 alone, more than 13,300 people globally lost their jobs. Those affected include employees at Meta, TikTok, Dyson, Microsoft and Google, some of whom were based in Singapore.


aiya just 13k now in 2025, sabai sabai lah
 

yperic

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Creative Technology cuts workforce, continues wave of tech layoffs​


Creative’s retrenchment follows a global tech trend, which started in 2022.

Creative’s retrenchment follows a global tech trend, which started in 2022. PHOTO: ST FILE

SINGAPORE – Home-grown electronics firm Creative Technology has retrenched about 40 staff, or 14 per cent of its workforce, as the tech layoff wave continues its rampage, The Straits Times has learnt.

Confirming the layoffs, a company spokesman said: “Creative Technology has undertaken a decision to restructure parts of its business to adapt to the evolving market conditions. As part of this transformation, it had to undergo a staff retrenchment exercise.”

The spokesman, however, declined to confirm the number of affected staff, and whether they are all located in Singapore. According to its corporate website, Creative has more than 280 employees worldwide – a fraction of the size of the company’s workforce during the boom years of the 2000s.

ST understands that the restructuring affected several departments, including sales and marketing.

“This decision was not taken lightly as our employees have been the heart of our company, and we deeply appreciate the hard work, dedication, and passion they have brought to our organisation,” said the spokesman. He added that the firm would support affected staff through the exercise, which was conducted in line with the Manpower Ministry’s guidelines.

“We believe this restructuring will allow us to build a stronger, more sustainable future; one that ensures long-term success for our company, our employees and the customers we serve. We are committed to working to get Creative back on a sustainable trajectory ahead,” he said.

For the first six months of its fiscal year ended Dec 31, 2024, Creative’s net loss widened to US$6.1 million (S$8.1 million) from US$4.1 million in the year-ago period. This was despite higher net sales of US$37.4 million, a rise of 18 per cent from US$31.8 million in the year-ago period, from selling new audio products, including the Super X-Fi earbuds and headphones.

The group had warned that uncertainty over the import tariffs announced by the Trump administration, as well as potential retaliatory measures from the affected countries, could increase inflationary pressures and affect consumer demand.

Creative’s retrenchment follows a global tech trend, which started in 2022.

According to figures from Layoffs.fyi, which tracks layoffs in the technology industry, hundreds of thousands of employees in tech firms have been given the pink slip since 2022.

In 2024, 548 tech firms terminated more than 150,000 employees. In the first two months of 2025 alone, more than 13,300 people globally lost their jobs. Those affected include employees at Meta, TikTok, Dyson, Microsoft and Google, some of whom were based in Singapore.

In a Feb 28 bourse filing, Creative said it was on a global hunt for a “dynamic and visionary” replacement for its chief executive officer, Mr Song Siow Hui, who retired in February after more than three decades with the company. Executive chairman Tan Jok Tin is the interim chief executive officer.

Mr Song’s appointment came after the unexpected death in January 2023 of former chief executive officer Sim Wong Hoo, one of Singapore’s most famous technology entrepreneurs.

Under Mr Sim, who founded the firm in 1981, Creative grew substantially in the 1990s and put Singapore on the world map with its wildly popular Sound Blaster card, launched in 1989.

The product was a game changer in allowing multimedia content to come alive on a personal computer. They were outselling competitors by a ratio of seven to three through the 1990s due to their affordability and quality. More than 400 million units of the product have been sold since.

Creative became the first Singapore company to list shares on the Nasdaq in 1992.

It is also the first Singapore firm to wage war with Apple over portable music players. Creative had launched its Nomad MP3 player in 1999, two years before Apple unveiled the iPod.

This invention would soon change the way people consume music on the go, pioneering the way thousands of pieces of music could be offered on a handheld device without the user having to fumble with physical media like CDs and cassette tapes.

In 2006, Creative sued Apple for patent infringements and walked away with a US$100 million settlement.

Creative also rolled out other music players such as the Nomad Jukebox Zen, which doubled as a portable storage device for other media such as photos and videos. However, its products ultimately lost out as Apple’s music player gained popularity.

  • Irene Tham is an assistant news editor and oversees tech coverage as The Straits Times’ technology editor.
 

m0n0n0ke

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blackie83

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They can resell Tiong brand electronics slap their logo on. Even that monitor brand can sell washing machine air con fan.
 

pwongkk

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Nothing more to innovate.

If only they had gone into the car stereo and captured that segment of the market.
 

BlackWing1977

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Nothing more to innovate.

If only they had gone into the car stereo and captured that segment of the market.
They can go into audiophile market.... that market pretty much runs on snake oil.... but they failed to capture that market... :ROFLMAO:
 
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