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Freshworks to cut 11% jobs as AI reshapes software industry

By Thomson Reuters May 5, 2026 | 3:25 PM

By Anhata Rooprai

May 5 (Reuters) – Freshworks 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 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 and ServiceNow.

San Mateo, California-based Freshworks’ stock had declined about 26% this year.

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.

(Reporting by Anhata Rooprai in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed ​and Sriraj Kalluvila)