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The list of major companies laying off staff this year includes Oracle, Nextdoor, Intel, Scale AI, and more

Peloton logo outside its New York City studios while woman walks by holding umbrella
Peloton said in August that it is making further cuts to its head count this year.

John Smith/VIEWpress

  • Companies such as Peloton, Intel, Meta, Microsoft, BlackRock, and UPS have trimmed staff this year.
  • In some cases, artificial intelligence is reshaping workforces.
  • See the list of companies letting workers go in 2025.

The list of companies laying off employees this year is growing.

Layoffs and other workforce reductions have continued in 2025, following two years of significant job cuts in tech, media, finance, manufacturing, retail, and energy.

While the reasons for slimming staff vary, the cost-cutting measures are coming amid technological change. A World Economic Forum survey found that some 41% of companies worldwide expect to reduce their workforces over the next five years because of the rise of artificial intelligence.

Companies such as Oracle, CNN, Dropbox, and Block have previously announced job cuts related to AI. Though Amazon has not announced job cuts this year, CEO Andy Jassy told employees in June that the company will need "fewer people doing some of the jobsΒ that are being done today" in the coming years as it expands its use of generative AI and agents.

Meanwhile, tech jobs in big data, fintech, and AI are expected to double by 2030, according to the WEF.

Here are the companies with job cuts planned or already underway in 2025 so far, in alphabetical order.

Adidas plans to cut up to 500 jobs in Germany.
Adidas shoes are seen in the store in Hoofddorp, Netherlands.
Despite a strong year, Adidas is planning job cuts.

Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Adidas said in January that it would reduce the size of its workforce at its headquarters in Herzogenaurach, Germany, affecting up to 500 jobs, CNBC reported.

If fully executed, it amounts to a reduction of nearly 9% at the company headquarters, which employs about 5,800 employees, according to the Adidas website.

The news came shortly after the company announced it had outperformed its profit expectations at the end of 2024, touting "better-than-expected" results in the fourth quarter.

An Adidas spokesperson said the company had grown "too complex because of our current operating model."

"To set adidas up for long-term success, we are now starting to look at how we align our operating model with the reality of how we work. This may have an impact on the organizational structure and number of roles based at our HQ in Herzogenaurach."

The company said it is not a cost-cutting measure and could not confirm concrete numbers.

Ally is cutting less than 5% of workers.
Hands typing on a laptop with the Ally website on its screen.

Ally Bank/Facebook

The digital-financial-services company Ally is laying off roughly 500 of its 11,000 employees, a spokesperson confirmed to BI.

"As we continue to right-size our company, we made the difficult decision to selectively reduce our workforce in some areas, while continuing to hire in our other areas of our business," the spokesperson said.

The spokesperson also said the company was offering severance, outplacement support, and the opportunity to apply for openings at Ally.

Ally made a similar level of cuts in October 2023, the Charlotte Observer reported.

Automattic, Tumblr's parent, cuts 16% of staff
Logo of Tumblr.

Thiago Prudencio/SOPA/LightRocket/Getty Images

Automattic, the parent company of Tumblr and WordPress, said in April it is cutting 16% of its staff globally. The company's website said it has nearly 1,500 employees.

Automattic's CEO, Matt Mullenweg, said in a note to employees posted online that the company has reached an "important crossroads."

"While our revenue continues to grow, Automattic operates in a highly competitive market, and technology is evolving at unprecedented levels," the note read.

The company is restructuring to improve its "productivity, profitability, and capacity to invest," it added.

The company said it was offering severance and job placement resources to affected employees.

BlackRock is cutting 1% of its workforce.
A black-and-white photo of the BlackRock logo on a building, viewed from below.

Eric Thayer/Reuters

BlackRock told employees it was planning to cut about 200 people of its 21,000-strong workforce, Bloomberg reported in January.

The reductions were more than offset by some 3,750 workers who were added last year and another 2,000 expected to be added in 2025.

BlackRock's president, Rob Kapito, and its chief operating officer, Rob Goldstein, said the cuts would help realign the firm's resources with its strategy, Bloomberg reported.

Block to lay off nearly 1,000 workers
Smartphone with Square logo is seen in front of displayed Afterpay logo

REUTERS/Dado Ruvi

Jack Dorsey's fintech company, Block, is laying off nearly 1,000 employees, according to TechCrunch and The Guardian, in its second major workforce reduction in just over a year.

The company, which operates Square, Afterpay, CashApp, and Tidal, is transitioning nearly 200 managers into non-management roles and closing almost 800 open positions, according to an email obtained by TechCrunch.

Dorsey, who co-founded Block in 2009 after previously leading Twitter, announced the layoffs in March in an internal email titled "smaller block."

The restructuring is part of a broader effort to streamline operations, though Block maintains the changes are not driven by financial targets or AI replacements.

Bloomberg is making cuts in an overhaul of its newsroom
Bloomberg LP NYC office exterior

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

Bloomberg is cutting some editorial staff as the company reorganizes its newsroom, according to a memo viewed by BI. The larger strategy aims to have a larger headcount by the end of this year, however.

The newsroom currently employs around 2,700 people, and the changes will merge some smaller teams into larger units, the memo said.

Blue Origin is laying off one-tenth of its workforce
Blue Origin

Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Jeff Bezos's rocket company, Blue Origin, is laying off about 10% of its workforce, a move that could affect more than 1,000 employees.

In a memo sent to staff in February and obtained by Business Insider, David Limp, the CEO of Blue Origin, said the company's priority going forward was "to scale our manufacturing output and launch cadence with speed, decisiveness and efficiency for our customers."

Limp specifically identified roles in engineering, research and development, and management as targets.

"We grew and hired incredibly fast in the last few years, and with that growth came more bureaucracy and less focus than we needed," Limp wrote. "It also became clear that the makeup of our organization must change to ensure our roles are best aligned with executing these priorities."

The news comes after January's debut launch of the company's partially reusable rocket β€” New Glenn.

Boeing cut 400 roles from its moon rocket program
Boeing Employees Renton Washington

Stephen Brashear/Getty Images

Boeing announced on February 8 that it plans to cut 400 roles from its moon rocket program amid delays and rising costs related to NASA's Artemis moon exploration missions.

Artemis 2, a crewed flight to orbit the moon on Boeing's space launch system, has been rescheduled from late 2024 to September 2025. Artemis 3, intended to be the first astronaut moon landing in the program, was delayed from late 2025 and is now planned for September 2026.

"To align with revisions to the Artemis program and cost expectations, we informed our Space Launch Systems team of the potential for approximately 400 fewer positions by April 2025," a Boeing spokesperson told Business Insider. "We are working with our customer and seeking opportunities to redeploy employees across our company to minimize job losses and retain our talented teammates."

The company will issue 60-day notices of involuntary layoff to impacted employees "in coming weeks," the spokesperson said.

Boeing cut 10% of its workforce last year.

BP slashed 7,700 staff and contractor positions worldwide
A BP logo on a gas station sign.

John Keeble/Getty Images

BP told Business Insider in January that it planned to cut 4,700 staff and 3,000 contractors, amounting to about 5% of its global workforce.

The cuts were part of a program to "simplify and focus" BP that began last year.

"We are strengthening our competitiveness and building in resilience as we lower our costs, drive performance improvement and play to our distinctive capabilities," the company said.

Bridgewater cut about 90 staff
An office in a forested area with a glass bridge connecting buildings.
Outside Bridgewater Associates' Westport, Connecticut headquarters.

Bridgewater Associates

Bridgewater Associates cut 7% of its staff in January in an effort to stay lean, a person familiar with the matter told Business Insider.

The layoffs at the world's largest hedge fund bring its head count back to where it was in 2023, the person said.

The company's founder,Β Ray Dalio,Β said in a 2019 interview that about 30% of new employees were leaving the firm within 18 months.

Bumble said it intends to cut 30% of its workforce.
whitney wolfe herd bumble ceo founder
Founder and CEO of Bumble Whitney Wolfe attends Bumble Presents: Empowering Connections at Fair Market on March 9, 2018 in Austin, Texas.

Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for Bumble

In a June 23 securities filing, Bumble said it plans to slash 240 roles, about 30% of its workforce. The dating app company said the cuts will result in charges between $13 million and $18 million in its third and fourth quarters.

"We recently made some difficult decisions to adjust our team structure in order to align with our strategic priorities," a Bumble spokesperson said.

They told BI that the decision to lay off over 200 employees wasn't "made lightly."

Burberry says it plans on cutting 1,700 jobs
Burberry logo and flag

Pietro Recchia/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images

Burberry announced 1,700 job cuts in May, or about 18% of its global workforce, as part of plans to cut costs by about Β£100 million ($130 million) by 2027.

It plans to end night shifts at its Yorkshire raincoat factory due to production over-capacity.

The British company sunk to an operating loss of Β£3 million for the year to the end of March, compared with a Β£418 million profit for the previous 12 months.

Chevron is slashing up to 20% of its global head count
The Chevron logo is displayed at a Chevron gas station.
The Chevron logo is displayed at a Chevron gas station.

PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images

Oil giant Chevron plans to cull 15% to 20% of its global workforce by the end of 2026, the company said in a statement to Business Insider in February.

Chevron employed 45,600 people as of December 2023, which means the layoff could cut 9,000 jobs.

The move aims to reduce costs and simplify the company's business as it completes its acquisition of oil producer Hess, which is held up in legal limbo. It is expected to save the company $2 billion to $3 billion by the end of 2026, the company said.

"Chevron is taking action to simplify our organizational structure, execute faster and more effectively, and position the company for stronger long-term competitiveness," a Chevron spokesperson said in a statement.

The cuts follow a series of layoffs at other oil and gas companies, including BP and natural gas producer EQT.

CNN plans to cut 200 jobs
CNN's world headquarters in Atlanta.
CNN is cutting staff in a bid to focus the business on its digital news services.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Cable news giantΒ CNNΒ cut about 200 television-focused roles as part of a digital pivot. The cuts amounted to about 6% of the company's workforce.

In a memo sent to staff on January 23, CNN's CEO Mark Thompson said he aimed to "shift CNN's gravity towards the platforms and products where the audience themselves are shifting and, by doing that, to secure CNN's future as one of the world's greatest news organizations."

Coty is cutting about 700 jobs
OTY logo is seen displayed on a smartphone and in the background.

Illustration by Avishek Das/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Coty, which sells cosmetics and fragrances under brands such as Kylie Cosmetics, Calvin Klein, and Burberry, is cutting about 700 jobs.

The company said on April 24 it aimed to cut costs by $130 million a year. Sue Nabi, the CEO, said it aimed to build a "stronger, more resilient Coty that is well-positioned for sustainable growth."

CrowdStrike is cutting about 500 jobs
Crowdstrike logo on a phone screen
The IT outage was triggered by a defect in an update issued by Crowdstrike.

Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto/Getty Images

CrowdStrike, the Texas-headquartered cybersecurity firm, is cutting about 500 jobs, or 5% of its global workforce, as part of a strategic plan to "yield greater efficiencies."

It expects the layoffs to cost between $36 million and $53 million.

CrowdStrike is aiming to generate $10 billion in annual recurring revenue.

The company reported worse-than-expected annual results in March, signaling that it was yet to fully recover from a widespread tech outage linked to CrowdStrike in July 2024.

Disney says it's laying off several hundred employees
Disney logo is seen on the store in Rome, Italy on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Disney is carrying out its fourth layoff in the past year.

Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Disney confirmed to BI on June 2 that it was laying off several hundred employees globally.

Most of the cuts were to roles in marketing for films and TV under the Disney Entertainment division. Other roles affected included employees in publicity, casting, and development, as well as corporate finance.

In March, the company also cut around 200 people from its ABC News Group and Disney Entertainment Networks. In 2024, the company also had several rounds of layoffs.

Shortly after Bob Iger returned to the company as CEO in 2022, he said 7,000 jobs at Disney would be cut as part of a reorganization.

EstΓ©e Lauder will cut as many as 7,000 jobs
estee lauder
American multinational skincare, and beauty products brand, EstΓ©e Lauder logo seen in Hong Kong.

Budrul Chukrut/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Cosmetics giant EstΓ©e Lauder said in its second-quarter earnings release on February 4 that it will cut between 5,800 and 7,000 jobs as the company restructures over the next two years.

The cuts will focus on "rightsizing" certain teams, and it will look to outsource certain services. The company says it expects annual gross benefits of between $0.8 billion and $1.0 billion before tax.

Geico has axed tens of thousands of workers
geico

Geico

Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chair of Insurance Operations Ajit Jain says Geico has reduced its workforce from about 50,000 to about 20,000. Jain revealed the reductions during Berkshire Hathaway's annual meeting on May 3 but did not detail over what time frame they took place. Berkshire Hathaway is one of Geico's parent companies.

Warren Buffett's company reported its 2025 first-quarter earnings on during the May 3 meeting, saying Geico earned nearly $2.2 billion in pre-tax underwriting.

GrubHub announced 500 job cuts
A Grubhub delivery person rides in Manhattan.
GrubHub said it is focusing on aligning its business with Wonder after the takeover was completed last month.

Andrew Kelly/REUTERS

Grubhub CEO Howard Migdal announced 500 job cuts on February 28 after selling the company to Wonder Group for $650 million.

With more than 2,200 full time employees, the number of cuts will affect more than 20% of Grubhub's previous workforce.

According to Reuters, Just Eat Takeaway, an Amsterdam-listed company, sold Grubhub at a steep loss compared to the billions it paid a few years prior after grappling with slowing growth and high taxes.

HPE is laying off 2,500 employees
A man with grey hair wears a blue collared shirt and dark blue shirt. He gestures as he speaks while sitting on a stage in front of a large blue screen.
US company Hewlett Packard Enterprise President and Chief Officer Executive Antonio Neri gives a conference at the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry's biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona on February 27, 2024.

PAU BARRENA / AFP

Hewlett Packard Enterprise is cutting 2,500 jobs, or 5% of its employee base, CEO Antonio Neri said on an earnings call on March 6. The cuts are expected take to take place over the next 12 to 18 months.

"Doing so will better align our cost structure to our business mix and long-term strategy," Neri said. The company expects to save $350 million by 2027 because of the reduction.

HPE plummeted about 20% after hours on March 6 after it said business would be affected by recent tariffs, slow server and cloud sales, and "execution issues."

Intel to cut at least 15% of its factory workers
The Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California
The Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California

Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Chipmaker Intel is laying off more than 5,000 employees across four US states, according to a July 16 government filing.

Most of the cuts are happening in California and Oregon, while others are in Texas and Arizona, per updated Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification, or WARN, filings.

Intel began laying off employees in July as part of planned job cuts, the company said in a regulatory filing.

The company told staff on June 14 to expect 15% to 20% of employees in its Foundry division to be laid off this summer, according to a memo reported by The Oregonian. Intel confirmed the authenticity of the memo to BI but declined to comment on its contents.

As of December 2024, Intel employed about 108,900 people. In its annual report, the company told investors that it would reduce its "core Intel workforce" by about 15% in early 2025.

"Removing organizational complexity and empowering our engineers will enable us to better serve the needs of our customers and strengthen our execution," an Intel spokesperson told BI.

Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Johns Hopkins Hospital.

Courtesy of Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins University will cut over 2,000 jobs after losing $800 million in funding from USAID.

"This is a difficult day for our entire community," a spokesperson told BI. "The termination of more than $800 million in USAID funding is now forcing us to wind down critical work here in Baltimore and internationally."

The news comes after the Trump administration slashed USAID personnel down from over 10,000 to around 300. Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently confirmed that 83% of the agency's programs are now dead.

"We can confirm that the elimination of foreign aid funding has led to the loss of 1,975 positions in 44 countries internationally and 247 in the United States in the affected programs," the Johns Hopkins spokesperson said. "An additional 29 international and 78 domestic employees will be furloughed with a reduced schedule."

The layoffs at Johns Hopkins represent the "largest" in the university's history, CNN reported. They'll primarily affect the schools of medicine and public health, along with the Center for Communication Programs and Jhpiego, a nonprofit with a focus on preventing diseases and bolstering women's health, according to the report.

Kohl's is reducing about 10% of its roles
A Kohl's department store in Miami.
A Kohl's department store in Miami.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Department store Kohl's announced on January 28 that it reduced about 10% of its corporate roles to "increase efficiencies" and "improve profitability for the long-term health and benefit of the business," a spokesperson told BI.

"Kohl's reduced approximately 10 percent of the roles that report into its corporate offices," the spokesperson said. "More than half of the total reduction will come from closing open positions while the remainder of the positions were currently held by our associates."

Less than 200 existing employees of the company would be impacted, she added.

This follows the company's announcement on January 9 that it would shutter 27 underperforming stores across 15 states by April.

The retailer has been struggling with declining sales, reporting an 8.8% decline in net sales in the third quarter of 2024.

Its previous CEO, Tom Kingsbury, stepped down on January 15. The company's board appointed Ashley Buchanan, a retail veteran who had held top jobs in The Michaels Companies, Macy's, and Walmart, as the new CEO.

Meta is cutting 5% of its workforce
Meta sign
Meta slashed its DEI team in January.

Fabrice COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg told staff he "decided to raise the bar on performance management" and will act quickly to "move out low-performers," according to an internal memo seen by BI in January.

Those cuts started in February, according to records obtained by BI. Teams overseeing Facebook, the Horizon virtual reality platform, as well as logistics were among the hardest hit.

In April, Meta also laid off an undisclosed number of employees on the Reality Labs virtual reality division.

Previously, the company had laid off more than 21,000 workers since 2022.

Microchip Technology is slashing 2,000 jobs
Semiconductor manufacturing.
Nvidia semiconductor manufacturing.

Krystian Nawrocki/Getty Images

Microchip Technology is cutting its head count across the company by around 2,000 employees, the semiconductor company said on March 3.

The company estimated that it would incur between $30 million and $40 million in costs, including severance, severance benefits, and other restructuring costs.

The cuts would be communicated to employees in the March quarter and fully implemented by the end of the June quarter.

Last year, Microchip announced it was closing its Tempe, Arizona, facility because of slower-than-anticipated orders. The closure begins in May 2025 and is expected to affect 500 jobs.

Microchip's stock had fallen over 33% in the past year.

Microsoft has made several rounds of cuts this year
the Microsoft logo on a building.

NurPhoto/Getty Images

Microsoft cut an unspecified number of jobs in January based on employees' performance.

Workers were told that they wouldn't receive severance and that their benefits, such as medical insurance, would stop immediately, BI reported.

The company also laid off some employees in January at divisions including gaming and sales. A Microsoft spokesperson declined to say how many jobs were cut on the affected teams.

In May, the company announced layoffs affecting about 6,000 workers.

Another round of layoffs in July will affect less than 4% of its total workforce, or roughly 9,000 employees, based on its head count of around 220,000.

Morgan Stanley plans cuts for the end of March
Morgan Stanley

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Morgan Stanley is set to initiate a round of layoffs beginning at the end of March. The firm is eyeing cuts to about 2% to 3% of its global workforce, which would equate to between 1,600 to 2,400 jobs, according to a person familiar with the matter who confirmed the reductions to BI.

The firm's cuts are driven by several imperatives, the person said, pointing to considerations like operational efficiency, evolving business priorities, and individual employees' performance. The person said the cuts are not related to broader market conditions, such as the recent slowdown in mergers and acquisitions that's arrested momentum on Wall Street.

Some MS staffers will be excluded from the cuts, however β€” namely, the bank's battalion of financial advisors β€” though some who assist them, such as administrative personnel in its wealth-management unit, could be affected by the layoffs, the person added.

Nextdoor is slashing 12% of its staff
Nextdoor app

Eric Baradat/AFP/Getty Images

Neighborhood social networking company Nextdoor is cutting 12% of its staff, or 67 jobs, it said on August 7 in its second-quarter earnings report. The move is part of CEO Nirav Tolia's plan to achieve profitability and reorganize the struggling company.

The layoffs are expected to reduce operating expenses by about $30 million, it said in the earnings report.

The company reported a net loss of $15 million, compared to $43 million year-over-year.

Nissan says it will cut 20,000 jobs by 2027
Nissan

Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images

Japanese car giant Nissan is cutting 20,000 jobs by 2027 and reducing the number of factories it operates from 17 to 10 as it struggles with a dire financial situation.

The job losses include the 9,000 layoffs announced late last year, and come as the automaker faces headwinds from US tariffs on imported vehicles and collapsing sales in China.

Nissan reported a net loss of 671 billion yen ($4.5 billion) for the 2024 financial year, and said it would not issue an operating profit forecast for 2025 because of tariff uncertainty.

Oracle is reportedly cutting jobs from its cloud division.
Oracle office in Santa Monica, California
Oracle office in Santa Monica, California

Richard Vogel/AP

Oracle is cutting jobs in its cloud unit, Bloomberg reported. The cuts come as the company works to curb costs amid spending on AI infrastructure.

Sources familiar with the cuts told Bloomberg that some of the cuts were related to performance issues.

Oracle did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Panasonic is cutting 10,000 jobs
panasonic
A man looks at television sets by Japanese firm Panasonic at an electronics retailer in Tokyo June 10, 2015.

REUTERS/Thomas Peter

Panasonic, the Japanese-headquartered multinational electronics manufacturer, plans to cut 10,000 jobs this financial year, which ends in March 2026. The cuts will affect 5,000 roles in Japan and 5,000 overseas.

In a statement on May 9, the company said it planned to "thoroughly review operational efficiency … mainly in sales and indirect departments, and reevaluate the numbers of organisations and personnel actually needed."

"Through these measures, the company will optimize our personnel on a global scale," the statement added.

Paramount is cutting 3.5% of its US workforce
Paramount on building

PATRICK T. FALLON/Getty Images

Paramount told employees it would be laying off 3.5% of US-based staff based in the US, per a memo reported by CNBC on June 10, citing industry-wide declines and a challenging macroeconomic environment.

The move comes after the media company cut 15% of jobs last year to cut costs. Paramount had 18,600 employees at the end of 2024.

It is awaiting regulatory approval of its merger with Skydance Media.

Peloton is looking for $100 million in run-rate savings by next year
FILE PHOTO: A Peloton exercise bike is seen after the ringing of the opening bell for the company's IPO at the Nasdaq Market site in New York City, New York, U.S., September 26, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
A Peloton exercise bike is seen after the ringing of the opening bell for the company's IPO at the Nasdaq Market site in New York City

Reuters

Peloton said in its August earnings report that it would cut its global headcount as part of an effort to find $100 million in run-rate cost savings by the end of the next fiscal year.

"As of today, we will have actioned about roughly half of the run rate savings through the reductions in our workforce and we expect to achieve the remainder throughout the balance of the year," CFO Elizabeth Coddington told investors on the earnings call.

The company employed about 2,900 people last year, and approximately 6% of the workforce will be affected by the reductions, Reuters reported.

Porsche is cutting 3,900 jobs over the next few years
The Porsche logo on the front trunk lid of a gold 2025 Porsche Taycan GTS EV sedan.
The Porsche logo on the front of a 2025 Porsche Taycan GTS EV.

Benjamin Zhang/Business Insider

Porsche said on March 12 that it plans to cut 3,900 jobs in the coming years.

About 2,000 of the reductions will come with the expiration of fixed-term contractor positions, the German automaker said. The company will make the other 1,900 reductions by 2029 through natural attrition and limiting hiring, it said.

Porsche said it also plans to discuss more potential changes with labor leaders in the second half of the year. "This will also make Porsche even more efficient in the medium and long term," the company said.

PwC is laying off approximately 2% of its US workforce
PwC, or Pricewaterhousecoopers.
PwC office in Washington D.C. in the United States of America, on July 11th, 2024. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto/Getty Images

The Big Four accounting firm said it's cutting roughly 1,500 jobs in the US because its low attrition rates mean not enough people are leaving by choice.

PwC's layoffs began on May 5 and mostly affect the firm's audit and tax lines, a person familiar with the matter told Business Insider.

"This was a difficult decision, and we made it with care, thoughtfulness, and a deep awareness of its impact on our people, appreciating that historically low levels of attrition over consecutive years have made it necessary to take this step," a PwC spokesperson said.

Salesforce is cutting more than 1,000 jobs
The outside of Salesforce Tower with the Salesforce logo, which is shaped like a cloud.

Gary Hershorn / Getty Images

Bloomberg reported in February that Salesforce, a cloud-based customer management software company, will slash more than 1,000 jobs from its nearly 73,000-strong workforce.

Affected employees will be eligible to apply to open internal roles, the outlet reported. The company is hiring salespeople focused on the company's new AI-powered products.

The cuts come despite Salesforce reporting a strong financial performance during its third-quarter earnings in December.

Salesforce did not respond to a request for comment.

Scale AI is cutting 14% of its workforce
Scale AI office
Scale AI is laying off 14% of its full time staff and hundreds of contractors.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

On July 16, Scale AI laid off about 200 full-time employees and 500 contractors, according to the company.

The 200 full-time cuts make up 14% of the data labeling startup's 1,400-person workforce.

The company is restructuring its generative AI group, according to an email from Scale's interim CEO, Jason Droege, obtained by Business Insider.

The cuts follow Meta's $14 billion investment in Scale AI in June as part of a blockbuster deal. The deal included the hiring of Scale's ex-CEO, Alexandr Wang, and the purchase of equity in almost half of the startup.

Sonos cuts about 200 jobs
Sonos

Christoph Dernbach/picture alliance via Getty Images

Sonos, a California-based audio equipment company, said in a February 5 release that it's cutting about 200 roles.

The announcement came nearly a month after Sonos CEO Patrick Spence stepped down following a disastrous app rollout. Interim CEO Tom Conrad said in the statement that the layoffs were part of an effort to create a "simpler organization."

Southwest Airlines
Southwest Airlines Boeing plane at an airport.
A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737.

AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Southwest Airlines CEO Bob Jordan announced in February that the company is laying off 15% of its corporate staff, or about 1,750 employees.

He said affected workers will keep their pay, benefits, and bonuses through late April, when the separations will take effect.

The company told investors the cuts would save about $210 million this year and $300 million in 2026.

The move comes as Southwest tries to cut costs amid profitability problems. Jordan said this is the first significant layoff the company has had in its 53-year history.

An activist hedge fund took a stake in Southwest in June and has since helped restructure its board and change its business model to keep up with a changing industry. For example, it plans to end its long-standing open-seating policy to generate more seating revenue.

In recent months, the company has also reduced flight crew positions in Atlanta to cut costs.

Starbucks is laying off 1,100 corporate staff
A customer wearing a magenta coat and black earmuffs opens the door and walks into a Starbucks store in New York City.

ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images

Starbucks planned to notify 1,100 corporate employees that they had been laid off on February 25.

CEO Brian Niccol said in a memo that the layoffs will make Starbucks "operate more efficiently, increase accountability, reduce complexity and drive better integration."

The layoffs won't affect employees at Starbucks stores, the company said.

Niccol told employees that layoffs were on the way in a separate memo in January. The company is trying to improve results after sales slid last year.

Stripe laid off 300 employees
The logo for Stripe.
Stripe.

Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Payments platform Stripe laid off 300 employees, primarily in product, engineering, and operations, according to a January 20 memo obtained by BI.

Chief people officer Rob McIntosh said in the memo that the company still planned on growing its head count to about 10,000 employees by the end of the year.

UPS is cutting 20,000 jobs
A UPS Delivery Driver

Vincent Alban/REUTERS

UPS announced on April 29 that it plans to cut 20,000 jobs this year β€” about 4% of its global workforce β€” as part of a shift toward automation and a strategic reduction in business with Amazon.

"With our action, we will emerge as an even stronger, more nimble UPS," the company's CEO, Carol TomΓ©, said in a statement.

The move follows a sharp 16% drop in Amazon package volume in Q4 and is part of a plan to halve its Amazon business by mid-2026. UPS will also close 73 US buildings by June and automate 400 facilities to reduce labor dependency.

The Teamsters union have said they would fight any layoffs affecting its members.

The Washington Post cut 4% of its non-newsroom workforce
The Washington Post building

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The Washington Post eliminated fewer than 100 employees in an effort to cut costs, Reuters reported in January.

A spokesperson told the news agency that the cuts wouldn't affect the newsroom: "The Washington Post is continuing its transformation to meet the needs of the industry, build a more sustainable future and reach audiences where they are."

Wayfair laid off 340 tech employees
Wayfair logo on building
Wayfair laid off about 340 tech employees.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Wayfair announced in an SEC filing on March 7 that it would eliminate its Austin Technology Development Center and lay off around 340 tech workers.

The reorg comes as the technology team has accomplished "significant modernization and replatforming milestones," the company said in the filing. Wayfair said it plans to refocus resources and streamline operations to promote its "next phase of growth."

"With the foundation of this transformation now in place, our technology needs have shifted," the company said.

Wayfair expects to take on $33 to $38 million in costs as a result of the reorganization, consisting of severance, cash employee-related costs, benefits, and transitional costs.

Workday cut more than 8% of its workforce
Workday logo
Workday said it's cutting 8.5% of its workforce and focusing on AI.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Workday, the human-resources software company, said in February that it is cutting 8.5% of its workforce, or around 1,750 employees. The layoffs came as the company focuses more on artificial intelligence.

In a note to employees, CEO Carl Eschenbach said that Workday will focus on hiring in areas related to artificial intelligence and work to expand its global presence.

"The environment we're operating in today demands a new approach, particularly given our size and scale," Eschenbach wrote. He said that affected employees will get at least 12 weeks of pay.

Is your company conducting layoffs? Got a tip?
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Have a tip? Contact Dominick Reuter via email or text/call/Signal at 646.768.4750. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely.

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  •  

An angel investor in 350 startups, including Airtable and Rippling, says founders shouldn't copy Silicon Valley playbooks

Immad Akhund
Immad Akhund, an angel investor since 2016, says blindly copying Silicon Valley playbooks like "founder mode" never works.

Vaughn Ridley/Web Summit via Sportsfile via Getty Images

  • Startups are told to follow Silicon Valley playbooks like "founder mode."
  • But an angel investor in 350 startups, including Airtable and Rippling, said "that never works."
  • The key is to understand the framework and context and "blend it" into your own company, Immad Akhund said.

Startups are told to run like Airbnb, go full "founder mode," and follow OKRs β€” Objective and Key Results. But Immad Akhund, an angel investor since 2016, said copying Silicon Valley playbooks can backfire.

It's "very easy" to try to copy and paste a Brian Chesky axiom to your situation, Akhund said on an episode of the "In Depth" podcast published Wednesday. "That never works," he added.

"The lessons work in their particular way for that particular situation, and you have to adapt them to your situation," he said.

Akhund said the key is to understand the framework and context that made it successful and then "try to blend it" into your own company.

For instance, Akhund, who is the founder and CEO of banking startup Mercury, said people told him to adopt an OKR framework once the company reached a "certain size."

"When we were small, I was like, 'OK, this is just silly,'" he said. "We don't need a structure for objectives, like there are just five people in the room. Let's just do this."

He also cautioned against letting metrics dictate every decision.

"Doing like, an extra bit that creates like a magical experience for customers, that's very hard to measure a metric against," he said.

It's dangerous to have everything be driven by metrics, he added.

Akhund has backed more than 350 startups at their earliest stages, including Rappi, Airtable, Rippling, Decagon, and Etched.

Akhund angel invests in "things that will seem inevitable 10 years from now and can be $10 billion companies," he told Business Insider in a May story about the most successful seed-stage investors.

Mercury, the fintech startup he founded, announced in March that it had raised a $300 million Series C round led by Sequoia at a $3.5 billion valuation.

Akhund did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Silicon Valley playbooks

Tech leaders have debated about the right way to run their companies.

Airbnb's Chesky said on an episode of The Verge's "Decoder" podcast published last month that embracing "founder mode," a term that he helped popularize, is key to acting like a nimble startup.

"In the age of AI, my argument is you need to be founder oriented/founder mode, because you're going to need to be able to move like a startup to be able to adapt," he said. "I think these big, professionally managed companies aren't organized to be able to do that, so they don't bode well for this new world."

Chesky talked about founder mode on the same podcast last year, saying people misunderstand the term. It's not about "swagger," he said, but instead about being focused on the details. The whole ethos is "that great leadership is presence, not absence," Chesky said last year.

But others see the risk in sticking to a single operating mode.

Hussein Kanji, a partner at VB firm Hoxton Ventures, said in a September story by Business Insider that it's easy to end up down the wrong track "if you live just in one mode."

"People love making things black and white when the world runs in a lot of different shades of truth," he said. "People have lost their ability to engage with seemingly contradictory ideas at the same time."

Some of the most successful tech companies right now are also overseen by leaders who weren't their founders. Satya Nadella at Microsoft is one such leader, as is Dara Khosrowshahi at Uber.

Axel Springer, Insider Inc.'s parent company, is an investor in Airbnb.

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  •  

An Accel-backed startup CEO says your next user isn't human — and it's changing how software gets built

Guillermo Rauch
Vercel's CEO says AI agents are becoming software's next users β€” and it's reshaping how APIs and developer tools are built.

Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images for Village Global

  • Software is no longer being built for people, but for AI agents, said Vercel's CEO.
  • "Your customer is the agent that the developer or non-developer is wielding," said Guillermo Rauch.
  • AI agents have been on the rise, and they could change how apps and software interact with users.

The future of software isn't being built for people β€” it's being built for machines, said Vercel's CEO, Guillermo Rauch.

"Your customer is no longer the developer," said Rauch on an episode of the "Sequoia Capital" podcast published Tuesday. "Your customer is the agent that the developer or non-developer is wielding."

The CEO of the web infrastructure startup, valued at $3.25 billion last year, said code isn't just being written for humans to read or interact with anymore. It's increasingly being written so AI agents can understand, use, and extend it.

"That is actually a pretty significant change," said Rauch. "Is there something that I could change about that API that actually favors the LLM being the, quote-unquote, entity or user of this API?"

This new AI-first era means software tools may need to evolve based on how large language models interact with them.

"LLMs' strengths and weaknesses will inform the development of runtimes, languages, type checkers, and frameworks of the future," Rauch said.

Rauch also said that in the AI era, Vercel's newer users β€” who may not be developers but designers, marketers, or even AI agents β€” expect things to just work.

Developers were used to dealing with errors and "terrible, negative feedback all day long," he said. But today's users have a much shorter fuse when something goes wrong.

Still, he sees that as an "amazing pressure" for product builders. "You want something that works 99.99% of the time," he added.

Last year, Vercel raised $250 million in a Series E round led by Accel, with investors including Tiger Global and GV.

Rauch and Vercel did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Rise of AI agents

2025 has been hailed as the year of AI agents. They could change how the internet works and how apps and software interact with users.

Bernstein analysts wrote in February that while websites and apps won't go away, users may no longer interact with them directly. Instead, they will access information, content, and widgets through an AI assistant that becomes "the aggregator of the aggregators."

"If it scales and plays out like we think it might, this. Changes. Everything. The aggregators get disaggregated, and much of consumer internet may be structural shorts. Welcome to the Agentic AI era," the analysts wrote. "There's nowhere to hide."

But these agents are not perfect. Researchers have warned that agent errors are prevalent and compound with each step they take.

"An error at any step can derail the entire task. The more steps involved, the higher the chance something goes wrong by the end," Patronus AI, a startup that helps companies evaluate and optimize AI technology, wrote on its blog.

The startup built a statistical model that found that an agent with a 1% error rate per step can compound to a 63% chance of error by the 100th step.

Still, they said that guardrails β€” such as filters, rules, and tools that can be used to identify and remove inaccurate content β€” can help mitigate error rates. Small improvements "can yield outsized reductions in error probability," Patronus AI said.

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  •  

Anthropic's CEO says massive salary changes could 'destroy' company culture

Dario Amodei
Dario Amodei said Anthropic is "not willing to compromise our compensation principles, our principles of fairness" in response to outside offers.

Chesnot/Getty Images

  • Dario Amodei made one thing clear: Anthropic won't join the Big Tech talent bidding war.
  • Massive salary changes could "destroy" the company's culture by treating people "unfairly," he said.
  • Employees turned down the offers β€” some "wouldn't even talk to Mark Zuckerberg," the CEO said.

When top engineers at Anthropic started receiving job offers from tech giants like Meta, Dario Amodei made one thing clear: The company wouldn't play the bidding war game.

On the "Big Technology Podcast" published Wednesday, Anthropic's CEO said he posted a message to staff declaring the company was "not willing to compromise our compensation principles, our principles of fairness" in response to outside offers.

He said Anthropic uses a level-based compensation system.

"When a candidate comes in, they get assigned a level, and we don't negotiate that level," Amodei said. "We think it's unfair. We want to have a systematic way."

"If Mark Zuckerberg throws a dart at a dartboard and hits your name, that doesn't mean you should be paid 10 times more than the guy next to you who's just as skilled," he added.

Amodei said that such massive salary changes could "destroy" a company's culture by treating people "unfairly."

Many of his employees have rejected the outside offers, and some "wouldn't even talk to Mark Zuckerberg," he said.

"This was a unifying moment for the company where we didn't give in," Amodei said. "We refuse to compromise our principles because we have the confidence that people are at Anthropic because they truly believe in the mission."

"What they are doing is trying to buy something that cannot be bought," he added.

Mark Zuckerberg highlighted some of Meta's new hires on Wednesday's earnings call.

"We're building an elite, talent-dense team," Zuckerberg said. "I've spent a lot of time building this team this quarter."

Meta and Anthropic did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Bidding war for top AI talent

Amodei's comments come as Big Tech companies are paying top dollar to recruit elite AI talent, a trend that's likened to sports franchises competing for superstar athletes like Cristiano Ronaldo.

The competition reached another level when Meta recruited Scale's CEO, Alexandr Wang, last month as part of a $14.3 billion deal to take a 49% stake in his company. Then, Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, said Meta had tried to poach his best employees with $100 million signing bonuses.

Just weeks ago, Google paid $2.4 billion to hire the CEO and top talent of AI startup Windsurf and license its intellectual property. OpenAI had planned to buy Windsurf for $3 billion, but the deal fell apart.

"It's not a hard choice" for the team at Anthropic because "people here are so mission-oriented," the startup's cofounder, Benjamin Mann, said on a recent episode of "Lenny's Podcast."

Perplexity's CEO, Aravind Srinivas, said on a recent episode of the podcast "Decoder" that Big Tech companies need to ensure that employees are motivated by mission as well as money.

"You're encountering new kinds of challenges. You feel a lot of growth, you're learning new things. And you're getting richer, too, along the way. Why would you want to go just because you have some guaranteed payments?" he said.

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  •  

Perplexity's CEO says you should spend less time doom-scrolling and more time using AI

Aravind Srinivas
As AI shrinks teams, Perplexity's CEO, Aravind Srinivas, said more entrepreneurs must emerge to create new jobs.

Craig T Fruchtman/Getty Images

  • "Spend less time doom-scrolling on Instagram, spend more time using AI," said Perplexity's CEO.
  • People who know how to use AI will be far more employable than those who don't, said Aravind Srinivas.
  • As AI cuts headcounts, Srinivas said new jobs have to come from entrepreneurs.

It's time to ditch social media's infinite scrolling in favor of a better hobby, said Perplexity's CEO.

"Spend less time doom-scrolling on Instagram, spend more time using AI," Aravind Srinivas said on a podcast episode by Matthew Berman published Friday.

"Not because we want your usage, but simply because that's your way to add value to the new society," he added.

Srinivas, whose company is positioning itself as an AI-native alternative to Google, said those who master AI tools will have the edge in the job market.

"People who are at the frontier of using AI are going to be way more employable than people who are not," he said. "That's guaranteed to happen."

But most people are struggling to keep up with AI, Srinivas said.

"The human race has never been extremely fast at adapting," he said. "This is truly testing the limits in terms of how fast we can adapt, especially with a piece of technology that's evolving every three months or six months."

"It does take a toll on people, and maybe they just give up," he added.

The CEO said some people will lose their jobs because they can't keep up. As AI shrinks headcounts across industries, Srinivas said new jobs have to come from entrepreneurs.

"Either the other people who lose jobs end up starting companies themselves and make use of AI, or they end up learning the AI and contribute to new companies," he added.

Perplexity's head of communications, Jesse Dwyer, said in a reply to Business Insider that "history shows over and over that the most successful people are not the ones with the most knowledge but the ones with the most questions."

AI is already changing the job market

Tech leaders have been sounding the alarm about how AI is reshaping the workforce.

Anthropic's CEO, Dario Amodei, predicted that AI could eliminate 50% of white-collar entry-level jobs within five years.

In May, he told Axios that AI companies and the government are "sugarcoating" the risks of mass job elimination in fields including technology, finance, law, and consulting, adding, "I don't think this is on people's radar."

Geoffrey Hinton, the so-called "Godfather of AI," echoed similar concerns, telling the Diary of a CEO podcast last month: "For mundane intellectual labor, AI is just going to replace everybody."

He said he'd be "terrified" to work in a call center or as a paralegal, and recommended becoming a plumber β€” a job he sees as safer from automation for now.

Others take a more optimistic view.

Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang, said AI won't kill jobs, but it will transform how every job is done.

"I am certain 100% of everybody's jobs will be changed," he told CNN's Fareed Zakaria on Sunday. "The work that we do in our jobs will be changed. The work will change. But it's very likely β€” my job has already changed."

"Some jobs will be lost. Many jobs would be created. And what I hope is that the productivity gains that we see in all the industries will lift society," he added.

Demis Hassabis, the cofounder of Google DeepMind, said in June that AI would create "very valuable jobs" and "supercharge sort of technically savvy people who are at the forefront of using these technologies."

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  •  

He lost half his vision to glaucoma. Now he's using AI to help spot disease — but he says tech will never replace doctors.

Kevin Choi stands in front of the logo Mediwhale
Kevin Choi lost half his vision to glaucoma. In 2016, he teamed up with his doctor to cofound Mediwhale, a South Korea-based healthtech startup.

Antoine Mutin for BI

  • At 26, Kevin Choi lost half his vision to glaucoma β€” a progressive eye disease.
  • The diagnosis sparked the start of his healthtech startup, which uses AI to detect critical diseases.
  • Choi said AI can speed up and simplify screening, but it's no substitute for a doctor.

At 26, Kevin Choi got a diagnosis that changed his life: glaucoma.

It's a progressive eye disease that damages the optic nerve, often without symptoms until it's too late. By the time doctors caught it, Choi had lost half his vision.

An engineer by training β€” and a former rifleman in South Korea's Marine Corps β€” Choi thought he had a solid handle on his health.

"I was really frustrated I didn't notice that," he said.

The 2016 diagnosis still gives him "panic." But it also sparked something big.

That year, Choi teamed up with his doctor, a vitreoretinal surgeon, to cofound Mediwhale, a South Korea-based healthtech startup.

Their mission is to use AI to catch diseases before symptoms show up and cause irreversible harm.

"I'm the person who feels the value of that the most," Choi said.

The tech can screen for cardiovascular, kidney, and eye diseases through non-invasive retinal scans.

Mediwhale's technology is primarily used in South Korea, and hospitals in Dubai, Italy, and Malaysia have also adopted it.

Mediwhale said in September that it had raised $12 million in its Series A2 funding round, led by Korea Development Bank.

Kevin Choi

Antoine Mutin for BI

AI can help with fast, early screening

Choi believes AI is most powerful in the earliest stage of care: screening.

AI, he said, can help healthcare providers make faster, smarter decisions β€” the kind that can mean the difference between early intervention and irreversible harm.

In some conditions, "speed is the most important," Choi said. That's true for "silent killers" like heart and kidney disease, and progressive conditions like glaucoma β€” all of which often show no early symptoms but, unchecked, can lead to permanent damage.

For patients with chronic conditions like diabetes or obesity, the stakes are even higher. Early complications can lead to dementia, liver disease, heart problems, or kidney failure.

The earlier these risks are spotted, the more options doctors β€” and patients β€” have.

Choi said Mediwhale's AI makes it easier to triage by flagging who's low-risk, who needs monitoring, and who should see a doctor immediately.

Screening patients at the first point of contact doesn't require "very deep knowledge," Choi said. That kind of quick, low-friction risk assessment is where AI shines.

Mediwhale's tool lets patients bypass traditional procedures β€” including blood tests, CT scans, and ultrasounds β€” when screening for cardiovascular and kidney risks.

Choi also said that when patients see their risks visualized through retinal scans, they tend to take it more seriously.

Kevin Choi on the street in Seoul
Choi said AI can help healthcare providers make faster, smarter decisions β€” the kind that can mean the difference between early intervention and irreversible harm.

Antoine Mutin for BI

AI won't replace doctors

Despite his belief in AI's power, Choi is clear: It's not a replacement for doctors.

Patients want to hear a human doctor's opinion and reassurance.

Choi also said that medicine is often messier than a clean dataset. While AI is "brilliant at solving defined problems," it lacks the ability to navigate nuance.

"Medicine often requires a different dimension of decision-making," he said.

For example: How will a specific treatment affect someone's life? Will they follow through? How is their emotional state affecting their condition? These are all variables that algorithms still struggle to read, but doctors can pick up. These insights "go beyond simple data points," Choi said.

And when patients push back β€” say, hesitating to start a new medication β€” doctors are trained to both understand why and guide them.

They are able to "navigate patients' irrational behaviours while still grounding decisions in quantitative data," he said.

"These are complex decision-making processes that extend far beyond simply processing information."

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  •  

My VC firm invests in hundreds of early-stage startups. AI won't put good engineers out of jobs — we're going to need more of them.

Antler's Magnus Grimeland
Magnus Grimeland, the CEO and founder of Antler, says AI will generate a higher demand for software engineers.

Magnus Grimeland

  • Magnus Grimeland, the CEO and founder of the VC firm Antler, said demand for software engineers will only grow.
  • AI will continue to make errors, and only software engineers will optimize this technology.
  • AI will also lead to further specialization among software engineers, he said.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Magnus Grimeland, the CEO and founder of Antler, a global early-stage venture capital firm. He also cofounded Zalora, a fashion e-commerce platform in Asia. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

There have been a lot of headlines about software engineering being replaced by AI, based on the assumption that anyone can just go in and code any program with natural language. It's actually much more likely that the need and demand for great software engineers will grow in the next couple of decades.

Even the best software engineers today make errors. AI models will also continue to make errors, at least for a very long time, and the only ones who will optimize this technology are software engineers.

At least over the next 20 to 30 years, what you will see is the best software engineers getting a tremendous amount of leverage to be more efficient and deliver better products faster. Software engineers will work in a different way than before.

In the not-too-distant future, we also need to adapt to an entirely new computer ecosystem, and the ones who are going to be able to do that are software engineers. We've already started investing in a few companies that are preparing for that.

Further specialization

AI will also lead to further specialization.

Today, software engineers are grouped a bit more generally. Some work on hardware, some on different types of software languages, and some are great mobile developers.

The complexity of the type of roles that you'll see for software engineers will increase significantly because the way this is being implemented in different industries will require specialized goals.

You'll also see fewer general engineers and more people who are really good at one specific thing.

Software engineers will work closer with businesses. AI will enable business leaders to work better with engineering departments because they can tinker with the early versions of the products themselves.

This should lead to more efficiency in terms of how the technical and less technical parts of the business work together, and that should actually give software engineering an even more important role in the business.

A new era of learning

When we were building Zalora and now at Antler, some of the best engineers we hired in Southeast Asia were self-taught.

They didn't have computer science degrees from universities. They read up on the internet, tinkered, and built their own programs.

AI has made it better than ever to teach people β€” as long as they have the right drive and basic intrinsics to learn how to become a great software engineer.

You'll see many more self-help people who are just as good as people who've done a full university degree.

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