Summary Freshworks to cut 11% workforce (~500 jobs) amid AI disruption. Shares fell 8% as automation rises; peers like Atlassian also trimming jobs across the sector.
(Reuters) - Freshworks (FRSH.O) said on Tuesday it would cut 11% of its workforce, or about 500 jobs, as the business-software company navigates the industrywide disruptions caused by the rapid advances in artificial intelligence.
Shares of the company, which makes software that manages customer service and tech support, were down more than 8% in extended trading.
The cuts are the latest tied to AI in the software business, as companies race to automate work and reshape products around the technology while trying to offset its steep costs. Peer Atlassian (TEAM.O) last month said it would slash roughly 10% of jobs.
At the same time, AI tools from Anthropic and others have emerged as potential existential threats to traditional software makers, hammering shares of companies ranging from Freshworks to larger rivals such as Salesforce (CRM.N) and ServiceNow (NOW.N) .
San Mateo, California-based Freshworks' stock had declined about 26% this year.
Chart comparing the price performance of software firms.
CEO Dennis Woodside told Reuters the decision was driven partly by AI use in product and engineering, as well as automation of routine work across the business.
"Over half of our code is written by AI," Woodside said, adding that automation had reduced "rote work that technology can take care of."
The restructuring will affect departments globally, the company said, and estimated one-time charges of about $8 million. The company had about 4,500 full-time employees, as of December 31, 2025.
Woodside said the savings from merging sales teams, reducing management layers and automating work would be reinvested in Freshworks' Employee Experience business, which includes its IT service management software Freshservice.
Layoffs.fyi, a website that tracks tech job cuts around the world, reported that 92,462 employees have lost their jobs this year.
Separately, Freshworks said it expects second-quarter revenue between $232 million and $235 million, the midpoint of which is above analysts' average estimate of $232.7 million, according to data compiled by LSEG.
In the first quarter, revenue rose 16% to $228.6 million, compared with estimates of $223.24 million. Adjusted profit came in at 11 cents per share, missing estimates of 12 cents.
