8 C
Ottawa
Wednesday, April 23, 2025

: Job cuts at Salesforce in 2023 would be first yearly workforce reduction in its 19-year history as a public company

Date:

Salesforce Inc.’s plan to cut jobs this year would mark the first yearly workforce reduction since the customer-relationship-management software company went public in 2004.

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

The company
CRM,
-2.31%

disclosed in its annual 10-K report for fiscal 2023 ending Jan. 31, 2023, which it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission late Wednesday, that it had 79,390 employees as of Jan. 31.

That’s up 8% from 73,541 employees at the end of fiscal 2022.

And since fiscal 2020, which ended just before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Salesforce’s workforce had soared 62%.

On Jan. 4, 2023, when the company said it would lay off 10% of its staff, Chief Executive Marc Benioff said the company “hired too many people” heading into the current economic slowdown, as revenue accelerated through the pandemic.

Don’t miss: Marc Benioff reminds Wall Street that ‘this isn’t my first recession,’ saying Salesforce’s activists ‘made a lot of money today.’

Also read: More than 127,000 tech-sector employees have lost their jobs since the start of 2023.

Cutting 10% of Salesforce’s staff would still leave its workforce at roughly 71,451, or well above its employee total for fiscal 2021 of 56,606. The company had 49,000 employees as of Jan. 31, 2020.

The company, which went public in June 2004, had 767 employees as of Jan. 31, 2005, according to its first 10-K filing. The workforce has increased every year since then by an average of about 30% (the median increase has been 28%). The biggest yearly percentage increase was 70%, in fiscal 2006, while the smallest increase was in fiscal 2023, at 8%.

Salesforce’s stock, which fell 2.3% to close at $178.72 on Thursday, has soared 36.3% over the past three months, while the SPDR S&P Software & Services exchange-traded fund
XSW,
-2.83%

has gained 7.1% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-1.66%

has slipped 3.7%.

know more

Popular

More like this
Related

Bill Cosby lists New York townhouse for $7 million after being sued for defaulting on a loan

Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerknow more

Pep Guardiola looks like a broken man in need of a break

They say you learn more in defeat. ‘They’ have clearly never stood where Pep Guardiola is standing now. Defeat teaches you about as much as a punch in the face. It hurts and haunts you, it climbs into bed with you and keeps you awake. It turns you against the world, then it turns you

Poilievre says costed platform coming tomorrow as last week of campaign underway

Canadians flock to advance polls over long weekendA record...