By Amir Mizroch And Juhana Rossi 

Telecom-equipment giant Ericsson AB said Wednesday it will shed 2,200 jobs, the latest move by Chief Executive Hans Vestberg to transition the company from a hardware provider into a global leader in mobile-network software.

For most of its 139-year history, Ericsson churned out consumer products, from its first device--a table-top phone introduced in 1892--to its once-popular cellphones. But more nimble competitors, including Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co., outmaneuvered Ericsson and its biggest rivals Nokia Corp. and Motorola Inc. The new players pumped out more popular phones, chasing all three out of the business.

Shortly after taking the reins in 2010, Mr. Vestberg, 49 years old, ditched the company's last handset model. He focused Ericsson full-time on building cellphone network equipment--the towers and base stations that underpin the world's wireless voice and data-transmission infrastructure--as well as the software that manages those networks.

Ericsson is now the world's top network-equipment maker, accounting for about a third of the industry's annual revenue, according to consultancy Dell'Oro Group. It competes with No. 2 Huawei Technologies Co. of China and No. 3 Nokia, which sold its handset business to Microsoft Inc.

In recent years, Ericsson rode a wave of growing revenue, as major operators such as AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. upgraded their networks to new high-speed standards. At the same time, Mr. Vestberg, who started at Ericsson in 1988, redoubled efforts to diversify into selling and servicing the software that run those networks.

Amid a downturn in network sales in the second half of last year, however, he has also been slashing costs to boost profitability. Ericsson promised in November to cut 9 billion Swedish kronas ($1.1 billion) in costs by 2017.

The job cuts disclosed Wednesday will all be in Sweden, Ericsson's home market. Ericsson said they are concentrated in research and development and supply divisions. They represent a small fraction of the company's roughly 118,000 world-wide staff, but more than 13% of its Swedish workforce.

Swedish labor union IF Metall called Ericsson's move "a hard blow" to employees. In a statement, Ericsson said the cuts are aimed at cutting expenses to fund growth in other areas, including its network and software businesses.

Ericsson's recent history has been strewn with jolting transformations. Between 2001 and 2003, amid a global technology pullback, Ericsson shed some 45,000 employees, almost half of its workforce of 100,000 at the time. It cut $50 million in costs every week for two years.

It had teamed up with Sony Corp. in 2001 to jointly make and sell handsets, a booming business at the time. But just a few years later, phone sales became increasingly dependent on consumer tastes, especially in the large and lucrative U.S. market. The iPhone debuted in 2007.

Five years later, Ericsson divested its 50% stake in the Sony joint venture. The move made Mr. Vestberg the first CEO in the company's history to abandon the consumer market completely. The decision was "emotionally difficult, strategically very simple," he said in an interview last week.

Wednesday's layoffs are part of Mr. Vestberg's more-recent overhaul--repositioning Ericsson's business away from costly hardware into software and services. In 2004, 73% of the company's revenues came from hardware, and only 27% from software and services. By 2014, that mix had been almost completely reversed.

"And still, I'm quoted as the equipment manufacturer," Mr. Vestberg said.

Write to Juhana Rossi at juhana.rossi@wsj.com

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