Salesforce is laying off about 10% of its workforce, more than 7,350 employees, in the latest round of job cuts in the tech industry as corporations cut back on software and other spending.
The San Francisco cloud computing software company will also be closing some offices, according to a regulatory filing Wednesday.
“The environment remains challenging and our customers are taking a more measured approach to their purchasing decisions,” said CEO Marc Benioff in a letter to employees. “With this in mind, we’ve made the very difficult decision to reduce our workforce by about 10 percent, mostly over the coming weeks.”
Benioff said employees being released will receive nearly five months of pay, health insurance, career resources and other benefits.
Salesforce employs about 73,500 people.
“Smart poker move”
“CRM is clearly seeing headwinds in the field and thus is trying to quickly adjust to a softening demand environment,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said in a report. “This is a smart poker move by Benioff to preserve margins in an uncertain backdrop as the company clearly overbuilt out its organization over the past few years along with the rest of the tech sector with a slowdown now on the horizon.”