The Tech Brunch The Tech Brunch

The Tech Brunch

The Tech Brunch

  • Home
  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
The Tech BrunchThe Tech Brunch
  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
Home > Mobile > After merger, T-Mobile lays off hundreds of Sprint employees
Mobile

After merger, T-Mobile lays off hundreds of Sprint employees

Published: Apr 14, 2022

In a conference call on Monday lasting under six minutes, T-Mobile vice president James Kirby told hundreds of Sprint employees that their services were no longer needed. He declined to answer his employees’ questions, citing the “personal” nature of employee feedback, and ended the call.

TechCrunch obtained leaked audio of that call, which was said to be one of several calls held by T-Mobile leadership throughout the day to lay off staff across the organization. The layoffs come just two months after its contested $26 billion Sprint merger was finally completed.

On the call, Kirby said T-Mobile was eliminating Sprint’s inside sales unit (BISO), a sales division that focuses on small businesses across the United States. The executive didn’t say exactly how many staff were laid off. Almost 400 people were in the phone meeting, a person on the call told TechCrunch.

Kirby is heard saying that the division’s layoffs would make way for 200 new positions, and encouraged employees to apply for one of the new positions using T-Mobile’s external careers page, spelling out the web address on the call twice. Some impacted employees may be able to shift to new roles, though the carriers don’t appear to have done much to facilitate the moves beyond encouraging staff to apply.

The employees who were laid off Monday will keep their jobs for another two months until August 13, said Kirby. A person on the call told TechCrunch that the severance packages amount to two weeks pay for every year on the job, but some employees may get more.

Employers are required to give two months notice in advance of mass layoffs under the WARN Act.

T-Mobile leadership held several conference calls with employees to announce layoffs across various Sprint divisions on Monday on both the business and consumer sides, according to the person on the call. The person said that they were unaware of any T-Mobile employees affected by the layoffs.

“They cut people from every division, but BISO seems to have been hit the hardest,” the person said.

One employee described their frustration. “I just feel the company needs to acknowledge the pain they are putting people through during a pandemic — severance package or not.”

When reached, a T-Mobile spokesperson did not comment by our deadline.

T-Mobile closed the Sprint merger on April 1. The deal found the nation’s third- and fourth-largest carriers merged in a manner they insisted would keep them more competitive with the No. 1 and No. 2 services — AT&T and Verizon (TechCrunch’s parent company) — which have long dominated the category.

The merger was, understandably, subject to intense regulatory scrutiny in the months leading up to its final approval, as it would effectively reduce the country’s key carriers to three down from four. Among T-Mobile’s chief selling points were the claim that — in addition to increased competition — a merger would create more jobs.

“In total, New T-Mobile will have more than 11,000 additional employees on our payroll by 2024 compared to what the combined standalone companies would have,” then-chief executive John Legere claimed in an open letter last April.

The exact effect the merger has had on employee headcount isn’t entirely clear, but last month The Communications Workers of America estimated that it would impact some 30,000 jobs due to the consolidation of retail stores and corporate roles.

“T-Mobile has made no written, verifiable commitments to the FCC to protect jobs,” the union wrote. “While T-Mobile has tried to muddy the waters with vague loophole-ridden pledges to maintain jobs for current T-Mobile and Sprint employees, three-quarters of current employees selling the companies’ services work for authorized dealers and are not covered by the jobs pledge — 88,000 workers in total.”

You Might Also Like

The Importance of Social Media Algorithm for Business

Best GreenTech Investment Platforms Guide

Best Rechargeable Travel Gadgets for Every Trip in 2026

Latest Enterprise Technology Trends 2026 Guide

Previous Article Rallyhood exposed a decade of users private data Rallyhood exposed a decade of users private data
Next Article European VC firm Pale Blue Dot plans to fund 40 ‘planet-positive’ startups European VC firm Pale Blue Dot plans to fund 40 ‘planet-positive’ startups

Latest News

The Importance of Social Media Algorithm for Business
Social Jul 09, 2026
Best GreenTech Investment Platforms Guide
Greentech Jul 08, 2026
Best Rechargeable Travel Gadgets for Every Trip in 2026
Gadgets Jul 07, 2026
Latest Enterprise Technology Trends 2026 Guide
Enterprise Jul 06, 2026
Best Startup CRM Software for Small Businesses in 2026
Startups Jul 03, 2026
Best Mobile for Vlogging Under 30000: Top Camera Phones
Mobile Jul 02, 2026
Difference Between Private Equity vs Venture Capital Funding
Fundings and exits Jul 01, 2026
Best Social Media Apps for Creators in 2026
Social Jun 24, 2026
Why Green Technology Is Important for Sustainability
Greentech Jun 17, 2026
Best Mobile Phones for Senior Citizens in India (2026)
Mobile Jun 15, 2026
about us

  • Startups
  • Social
  • Enterprise
  • Gadgets
  • Greentech
  • Mobile
  • Fundings and exits
How to Measure Carbon Footprint with AI Technology
How to Measure Carbon Footprint with AI Technology
Greentech Jan 06, 2026
Tech Business Startup Ideas That Will Dominate the Next 5 Years
Tech Business Startup Ideas That Will Dominate the Next 5 Years
Startups Dec 29, 2025

© Copyright 2026 thetechbrunch.com All Rights Reserved.

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms And Conditions