SAN JOSE >> Cisco Systems and IBM are slashing several hundred jobs in the Bay Area in wrenching cutbacks that serve as a grim reminder that the tech industry’s staffing reductions have yet to abate.

All told, well over 1,000 tech jobs are being lost in the Bay Area due to the job cuts by Cisco, IBM and Advantest.

Here are the details for the latest layoffs by the two tech leviathans and a smaller technology company, as well as the impact on Bay Area jobs:

• Cisco is cutting 842 jobs in the Bay Area. These layoffs will affect 563 jobs in San Jose, 145 in Milpitas and 134 in San Francisco.

• IBM is slashing 112 jobs in the Bay Area. These consist of 58 positions in San Francisco and 54 at the IBM Silicon Valley Lab in south San Jose’s Coyote Valley.

• Advantest, a semiconductor testing company, is chopping 88 jobs in Fremont.

All of the layoffs were described as permanent, according to official WARN notices the companies sent to the state Employment Development Department.

The layoff disclosures surfaced just ahead of a monthly employment report that showed the Bay Area’s tech hubs continued to shed jobs. In August, the South Bay lost 600 overall nonfarm payroll jobs, while the San Francisco metro area shed 400 jobs.

The East Bay, which doesn’t have nearly as great a concentration of tech jobs as the South Bay and San Francisco, added 1,800 jobs in August, a state labor report shows.

The Cisco job cuts were scheduled to take effect on Nov. 15, while the IBM layoffs were scheduled for Nov. 18. The Advantest staffing reductions were due to occur Nov. 22, the WARN notices showed.

Including the latest rounds of cutbacks, San Jose-based Cisco has chopped 2,649 jobs in the Bay Area since 2022, this news organization’s review of Cisco’s WARN filings with the state EDD show.

IBM has cut 165 Bay Area jobs over the same time period, according to this news organization’s review of the company’s WARN notices.

The disclosures of Cisco’s job cuts arrive on the heels of the tech company’s announcement that it would slash 7% of its workforce, which could amount to a loss of 5,900 positions worldwide.