Activision employees announce second union ahead of game company’s sale to Microsoft

Activision employees announce second union ahead of game company’s sale to Microsoft


Bobby Kotick, CEO of Activision Blizzard, attends the Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference on July 8, 2022, in Sun Valley, Idaho.

Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images News | Getty Images

A group of software testers at Activision Blizzard have formed the company’s second union, months before Microsoft is expected to close its nearly $69 billion acquisition of the video game publisher.

Employees at the company’s Blizzard Entertainment division in Albany, New York, are working with the Communications Workers of America to assemble their own group in the Game Workers Alliance, which was formed by staffers elsewhere at Activision.

In a series of tweets under the name GWA Albany, the group said it’s seeking competitive compensation with transparency, better benefits, clearer processes for communication about workplace issues and improved work-life balance. The unit consists of 20 people, according to CWA.

While labor movements have historically been rare in the technology industry, where pay and benefits tend to be stronger than other parts of the economy, they’ve become more familiar recently. Small groups of workers at Alphabet and Apple have taken steps to organize, and in April Amazon workers on New York’s Staten Island became the first group to vote in favor of unionizing at one of the company’s U.S. facilities.

At Activision, the labor demands come with greater heft after instances of alleged sexual misconduct at the company that CEO Bobby Kotick reportedly knew of for years without informing the board. Microsoft first reached out to Activision about a possible tie-up the same week that report surfaced, according to a regulatory filing about the deal.

An Activision spokesperson said the company will respond to the Albany union’s petition to the National Labor Relations Board.

“We deeply respect the rights of all employees under the law to make their own decisions about whether or not to join a union,” the spokesperson said. “We believe that a direct relationship between the company and its employees is the most productive relationship.”

The union activity at Activision, whose Blizzard divisions produces games including Diablo, Overwatch and World of Warcraft, dates to late 2021. Testers at Raven Software, the studio behind the popular Call of Duty series of games, held a walkout at the company’s headquarters in Wisconsin after a reported layoff of contractors. The testers had previously been told their pay would increase, one former worker said on Twitter.

By January, a small group of testers had established a union named the Game Workers Alliance in partnership with the CWA. Two months later, the CWA alleged that a manager at Activision had “threatened employees that they should not discuss issues concerning wages, hours and working conditions on Slack.” But employees voted in favor of unionizing.

After the vote, Kotick said the company would enter good-faith talks to reach a collective-bargaining agreement for the Raven testers.

“While first labor contracts can take some time to complete, we will meet CWA leaders at the bargaining table and work toward an agreement that supports the success of all our employees, that further strengthens our commitment to create the industry’s best, most welcoming and inclusive workplace, and enhances our ability to deliver world class games for our players,” Kotick told U.S. employees in a letter last month.

Microsoft has taken a more amenable approach to labor organizing.

Brad Smith, Microsoft’s vice chair and president, said in a blog post in June that “we are committed to creative and collaborative approaches with unions when employees wish to exercise their rights and Microsoft is presented with a specific unionization proposal.” He said the company doesn’t believe efforts to stop employees from starting or joining unions is beneficial.

WATCH: Microsoft says it’s open to working with unions





Source

Asana picks Dan Rogers, formerly of ServiceNow, to replace CEO Dustin Moskovitz
Technology

Asana picks Dan Rogers, formerly of ServiceNow, to replace CEO Dustin Moskovitz

Lisbon , Portugal – 12 November 2024; Dan Rogers, CEO, LaunchDarkly, on SaaS Summit stage during day one of Web Summit 2024 at the MEO Arena in Lisbon, Portugal. Harry Murphy | Sportsfile | Getty Images Collaboration software maker Asana said Wednesday it has chosen former Rubrik and ServiceNow executive Dan Rogers to be its […]

Read More
Trump administration moves to count crypto as a federal mortgage asset
Technology

Trump administration moves to count crypto as a federal mortgage asset

In a landmark shift for the U.S. housing finance system, the Federal Housing Finance Agency has issued a directive ordering Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to formally consider cryptocurrency as an asset in single-family mortgage loan risk assessments. The move, signed by FHFA Director William J. Pulte on Wednesday, signals a new era of crypto […]

Read More
Micron reports earnings, revenue beat and issues strong forecast
Technology

Micron reports earnings, revenue beat and issues strong forecast

Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra speaks before President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the CHIPS and Science Act and his Investing in America agenda, at the Milton J. Rubenstein Museum in Syracuse, New York, April 25, 2024. Andrew Caballero-Reynolds | AFP | Getty Images Micron shares rose in extended trading on Wednesday after the chipmaker reported […]

Read More