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Thursday 12 September 2019 7:53 am

British American Tobacco to axe 2,300 jobs as it focuses on vaping

By: Joe Curtis

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LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 27: In this photo illustration, a man smokes an E-Cigarette at the V-Revolution E-Cigarette shop in Covent Garden on August 27, 2014 in London, England. The Department of Health have ruled out the outlawing of 'e-cigs' in enclosed spaces in England, despite calls by WHO, The World Health Organisation to do so. WHO have recommended a ban on indoor smoking of e-cigs as part of tougher regulation of products dangerous to children. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

British American Tobacco (Bat) is slashing 2,300 jobs across the company as it seeks to simplify its business and re-invest in vaping under its new CEO.

Over 20 per cent of senior roles will disappear in the cull, said chief executive Jack Bowles, who added that the swathe of redundancies was “vital” to boost sales of vapour, e-cigarette and oral tobacco.

Read more: E-cigarette demand boosts sales at British American Tobacco

Bat is targeting £5bn in revenue from these new category products by 2023-24.

“Since taking on the role of chief executive five months ago, I have been clear that I wanted to make Bat a stronger, simpler and faster organisation and ensure a future fit culture,” Bowles said.

“My goal is to oversee a step change in new category growth and significantly simplify our current ways of working and business processes, whilst delivering long-term sustainable returns for our shareholders. This is a vital first move to help achieve these goals.”

Bat said the axe-swinging will reduce management layers, create fewer but larger business units and simplify key business processes.

Read more

British American Tobacco rolls out plan for thousands of job cuts in AI streamlining

Imperial Brands vape products displayed with declining cigarette sales chart in a business news context

The firm also believes it will be able to put its Global Business Services activities to better use.

The company hopes to have mostly concluded the process by January and has started a consultation process with all staff expected to be made redundant.

“A programme of this significance involves decisions that will be difficult for our people, but ultimately it is the right thing for our business,” Bowles added.

Read more: Trump thinks vaping is ‘a problem’ as officials move to ban flavoured e-cigarettes

President Donald Trump recently called vaping a “problem” for America as his administration looks at a possible ban on flavoured e-cigarettes.

Bowles became Bat CEO last November charged with modernising the firm as smoking declines and new tobacco formats like vaping grow in popularity.

He succeeded retiring CEO Nicandro Durante, who worked at Bat for almost 37 years. Bowles initially worked in Western Europe, the Americas and Asia-Pacific since joining Bat in 2004.

Read more

British American Tobacco shares slide as cigarette volumes decline

British American Tobacco headquarters with falling stock prices graph, reflecting decline in cigarette volumes and share p...

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