A productivity startup is laying off 22% of the company to create million-dollar salary bands
By
Katherine Li
You're currently following this author!
Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email.
ClickUp CEO Zeb Evans said the company laid off 22% of its workforce, but employees who "create outsized impact using AI" could see a million dollars.
A productivity startup is laying off 22% of the company to create million-dollar salary bands
By
Katherine Li
You're currently following this author!
Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email.

ClickUp cuts 22% of staff, offers $1M salaries in AI restructuring

Outnumbered: At $4 billion ClickUp, a 3:1 agent-to-human ratio is rewiring work itself | Fortune

Meta planning more layoffs after terminating 8,000 staff? Axed employee's remark on Mark Zuckerberg sparks buzz

Zuckerberg warns ‘success isn’t a given’ after laying off 10% of Meta

Intuit to Cut 17% of Staff, Invest in 'Big Bets' — Update

Meta CEO Zuckerberg defends layoffs of 8,000 workers, doubles down on AI spending

Zuckerberg's Meta layoffs memo: 'Success isn't a given' in the AI era

Mark Zuckerberg says he feels 'weight' of Meta layoffs - The Economic Times

Meta laid off 10% of its workforce as Mark Zuckerberg warns that in the AI race ‘success isn’t a given’ | Fortune

Cloudflare posted record revenue, then cut 20% of its workforce. CEO Matthew Prince says AI has made an entire category of workers obsolete | Fortune

ClickUp CEO Zeb Evans cut 22% of staff and introduced $1M salary bands for a '100x org' where AI agents outnumber employees 3:1.

"I've got a few chats with humans, but the vast majority of them are with agents," CEO Zeb Evans told Fortune.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg informed employees that no further company-wide layoffs are anticipated this year, following a recent…

As Meta laid off 10% of the company Wednesday, CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed the tech giant’s reorganization in a memo to…

By Dean Seal and Kristin Broughton

“It was extremely difficult,” IgniteTech CEO Eric Vaughan tells Fortune. “But changing minds was harder than adding skills.”