Airtable, a provider of low-code platform, implements fresh round of layoffs

Airtable, a provider of low-code platform, implements fresh round of layoffs

Low-code software company Airtable announced⁣ its second round of job cuts in nine ⁤months, laying off ⁤around 237 people, or approximately 27% of the company.

The cuts are part of a plan to ‍focus the⁢ company⁣ on⁣ winning large enterprise ⁢clients ⁢and getting spending⁢ under control, CEO Howie Liu told Forbes, which  first reported the⁣ layoffs. They follow‌ job cuts made by the company ⁢in December 2022 ‌that saw 254 people laid off.

Airtable will be cash-flow positive after this round⁢ of layoffs,‍ Liu reportedly said, adding that the‌ cuts were the result‍ of‌ a downturn ‌in business following⁤ a period of hypergrowth experienced by the company⁤ during⁤ the pandemic.

The Airtable ⁣app is a⁤ cloud-based relational ‍database that looks like⁣ a spreadhseet and can be⁣ used by nontechnical workers to analyze data as well as plan​ and collaborate​ on projects.

Airtable currently has ​six offices across the⁣ globe and the cuts will be companywide, with the largest layoffs hitting product and sales teams. Airtable has not yet ‍responded to a request for ‌comment.

Layoffs have plagued ⁣the tech sector in 2023

The start​ of 2023 saw a ⁢dizzying spell of job cuts in⁢ the ⁢tech sector with some companies — such as Amazon, Google,⁤ Meta, and Microsoft‌ — laying off tens of thousands of ⁢employees ⁣or experiencing multiple rounds of cuts.

Although things have somewhat plateaued in the second half of the year,​ Google’s parent company Alphabet let go of hundreds of⁤ employees ⁢from ‌its recruiting ⁣team this week, having already ⁤laid‌ off 12,000 employees in January of this year.

Elsewhere, the‌ explosion of generative AI in‌ the enterprise⁢ looks set to provide some job opportunities⁢ at​ companies ⁣that had previously shed⁤ a percentage of their workforce. Having laid off 8,000 employees in January, Salesforce announced this week that it is now⁢ planning to hire around 3,300 workers, including⁤ rehiring some⁢ of the⁤ company’s former ⁢employees. The⁢ newly recruited⁣ workers will ⁢be split between sales, engineering, and the team handling the development of its Data Cloud. ‍The plan‍ includes rehiring.

2023-09-17 17:24:02
Original from ​ www.computerworld.com rnrn

Exit mobile version