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In addition to its namesake weekly news magazine, Time Inc.’s publications include Sports Illustrated and People.SPORTS ILLUSTRATED/The Associated Press

Time Inc. on Wednesday began the process of cutting about 500 jobs, about 6 per cent of its total staff, as the largest U.S. magazine publisher grapples with challenges beleaguering the print industry.

The layoffs mark the first major move made by Time Inc. chief executive Laura Lang, who joined the company in January 2012.

"With the significant and ongoing changes in our industry, we must continue to transform our company into one that is leaner, more nimble and more innately multi-platform," wrote Ms. Lang in a memo to employees. The memo, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters, disclosed the number of jobs affected on Wednesday.

The cuts will occur across the company, throughout both business division and newsrooms. In addition to its namesake weekly news magazine, Time Inc.'s publications include Sports Illustrated and People.

Ms. Lang called the reductions "painful," but said they were necessary in order "to create room for critical investments and new initiatives."

The staff cuts had been widely expected, though they are not as deep as the last round in 2008, when Time Inc. slashed 600 jobs in response to the economic downturn.

Parent company Time Warner Inc. in November reported that third-quarter revenue at Time Inc. fell 6 per cent to $838-million (U.S.) because of declines in subscription and advertising revenue. Time Warner is due to report fourth-quarter results next week.

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