Aneel Bhusri and Carl Eisenbach, Co-CEOs of Workday, speaking on Squawk Box at the WEF in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 17, 2023.
Adam Galica | CNBC
Workday, a cloud-only business planning software company, will lay off 3% of its employees, the company’s co-CEOs wrote in a message to employees.
In Oct. 2022, the company reported head count of over 17,500 employees, an increase of over 15% compared to January of that year. That means the cuts should impact about 525 people.
Shares of Workday were up about 1% when markets opened.
The cuts were not the result of over-hiring, co-CEOs Aneel Bhusri and Carl Eschenbach wrote in the Tuesday message, and the “majority” would occur in Workday’s technology and product units. For the period ending Oct. 2022, Workday reported an increase of $228 million in “employee-related expenses, including share-based compensation,” which the company said was largely due to head count growth.
“While our confidence in the fundamentals of our business and future growth prospects remains strong, we continue to operate in a global economic environment that is challenging for companies of all sizes,” the co-CEOs said in a message.
The company intends to continue hiring throughout the fiscal year 2024, the executives said.
Employees who lost their jobs will receive three months of severance pay, and an additional two weeks of pay for each year of employment. Stock vesting will continue through April 2023, and like many other tech companies that laid off workers, Workday executives said the company would offer immigration support and optional medical benefits for six months.
Severance packages for international employees would be “similar” to those offered to U.S. employees, Bhusri and Eschenbach wrote in the message.
Workday went public in October 2012. The company had a little over 1,600 employees at the time, according to PitchBook data.