Indian Startup Layoff Tracker: 37,260+ Employees Laid Off By 130+ Startups Since 2022

Indian Startup Layoff Tracker: 37,260+ Employees Laid Off By 130+ Startups Since 2022

SUMMARY

Since the onset of the funding winter in 2022, an estimated 37,264 employees have been laid off by at least 130 Indian startups

Nearly 25 Indian edtech startups, including all seven edtech unicorns, have fired 14,816 employees

More than 755 employees have been fired by six startups so far this year, highlighting the fact that the situation around job cuts has hardly improved

View Inc42 Layoff Tracker

The year 2021 will be remembered as one of the most significant bubble events within India’s startup ecosystem. Following the COVID-19 pandemic, investors were bullish on Indian startups, pouring in unprecedented funding for use cases that have since passed into obscurity as normalcy returned.

Fast forward to the present day, and startup funding in India is normalising – though not without dips and falls. The past year saw Indian startups pick up a measly $10 Bn – less than half of 2022 and less than a quarter of 2021.

The bubble burst, spectacularly so, and as funding slowed to a drip, dozens of startups have bitten the dust since the start of the year, as startup layoffs continue to disrupt livelihoods across the country.

While the current scheme of things has prompted many marquee investors to instruct their portfolio startups to cut costs and increase runways, many founders seem to have caused a bloodbath in the job market in the name of undertaking cost-cutting measures.

Since the onset of the funding winter in 2022, an estimated 37,264 employees have been laid off by 130 Indian startups. Further, edtech has seen the most layoffs, followed by consumer services and ecommerce. The three sectors have collectively seen 59 startups laying off 26,730 employees since last year.

The edtech segment, in particular, has come under intense scrutiny. Since last year, at least 25 Indian edtech startups, including all seven edtech unicorns, have fired 14,816 employees.

Further, more than 755 employees have been fired by six startups so far this year, highlighting the fact that the situation around job cuts has hardly improved.

As the startup ecosystem continues to endure a funding winter and the subsequent slowdown, Inc42 has compiled a list of startup layoffs that have happened so far.

If you would like to report a layoff, pay cut etc. at a startup, write to us at [email protected].

View Inc42 Layoff Tracker

Layoffs Hit Indian Startups

February 25 | Inc42 Exclusive: WayCool Fires 70 Employees In Second Restructuring Exercise

WayCool Foods fired at least 70 employees in what was the second layoff exercise at the agritech startup within a year, sources told Inc42. The latest layoff exercise impacted employees across departments, including sales, research, marketing, and tech, sources said.

The sources cited the startup’s failure to raise any new funding round in the last two years as the reason behind the restructuring exercise. Responding to Inc42’s queries on the issue, a WayCool spokesperson confirmed the layoffs but did not disclose the number of employees impacted by the restructuring exercise.

“Over the past one year, WayCool Foods has focussed its investment behind its brands, to capture the benefit of its efficient supply chain to the fullest. Our brands have achieved a significant scale. This enables us to build a direct, warehouse-free supply chain from source to market. Hence, we have rationalised the warehouse footprint, resulting in some redundancies,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

February 25 | Log9 Materials Fires 115 Contractual Employees, Delays January Salaries

Along with delaying the salaries of all its employees for January, battery startup Log9 Materials has laid off 115 contractual employees.

Confirming the development, Log9 Materials cofounder Pankaj Sharma told Inc42 that the startup retrenched “115-ish” contractual workers in a “stepwise” manner. He, however, did not specify the timeline of the same.

Sharma attributed the mass layoff to automation. He added that the company has already made severance payments to all the employees impacted by its retrenchment exercise.

February 14 | Inc42 Exclusive: Wint Wealth Fires 20% Workforce In A Restructuring Exercise

Fintech startup Wint Wealth laid off around 20% of its workforce in an internal restructuring exercise, sources told Inc42. The restructuring exercise impacted employees across departments, including marketing, sales, and tech, sources said.

Confirming the development, a Wint Wealth spokesperson told Inc42, “As part of our regular business performance evaluation, we had to restructure some low-priority functions. This has impacted 19 people.”

The development comes close on the heels of the startup acquiring a majority stake in Chandigarh-based NBFC Ambium Finserve.

February 9 | Inc42 Exclusive: D2C Startup Blissclub Fires About 18% Workforce To Cut Costs

Bengaluru-based fashion apparel startup Blissclub laid off around 21 employees, or 18% of its workforce, in the second week of January, sources told Inc42.

The startup’s founder and CEO Minu Margeret informed the employees about the decision to lay off 21 employees as part of a restructuring exercise during a town hall on January 11. However, the number of employees affected by the exercise could be as high as 30, sources added.

The layoffs impacted teams across verticals, including sales, marketing, growth and product. However, the worst hit was the creative team, which was completely dissolved. The startup is paying a two-month salary as a severance package to the impacted employees.

February 9 | D2C Unicorn Licious Fires 80 Employees

D2C foodtech unicorn Licious sacked around 80 employees, or 3% of its total 3,000 people strong workforce, across several verticals as part of the company’s restructuring exercise.

Confirming the development to Inc42, a Licious spokesperson said, “We as a brand, see significant scope in expanding the number of targeted households to further fuel the consumer transition from traditional markets to contemporary purchase formats. We are reprioritising our cost outlays, considering the new growth levers. In doing this, it is unfortunate that we have to separate with some employees.”

Before the restructuring exercise, Licious comprised around 650 corporate staff and 2,400 people across production and supply chain functions.

January 25 | IPO-Bound Swiggy To Fire 350-400 Employees To Cut Costs

Food delivery giant Swiggy is likely to lay off 400 employees, or around 6% of its total workforce, as part of a corporate realignment process. The layoffs could impact employees across departments, but the customer support and tech teams took the hardest hit, sources told Inc42.

They added that the company began the restructuring drive in December 2023 at its Bengaluru office. The sources added that there are apprehensions that Swiggy might cut further roles in the tech and sales teams. “Those employees who came at a very high salary are being shown the door,” a source said.

This is the second round of layoffs undertaken by the startup in the past year. In January 2023, Swiggy fired 380 employees in a restructuring exercise.

December 29 | Inc42 Exclusive: Bolt.Earth Fires 20% Of Its Workforce

Bengaluru-based EV charging infrastructure and OS provider Bolt.Earth sacked around 15-20% of its workforce in a restructuring exercise. However, multiple sources told Inc42 that the layoffs impacted as much as 35% of the startup’s workforce. 

During a call with Inc42, cofounders Jyotiranjan Harichandan and Mohit Yadav said the layoffs were restricted to the startup’s OS team. They attributed the decision to the uncertainty surrounding the Centre’s FAME II scheme. However, sources said that the restructuring exercise involved all verticals. 

The startup offered a severance pay based on the employees’ notice period.

December 25 | AI-Powered Automation Sees Paytm Fire Hunderds

Fintech giant Paytm sacked hundreds of employees citing the increasing usage of AI-led automation. Sources told Inc42 that the company has been adopting AI, wherever possible, to drive up efficiency, which resulted in layoffs.

While Inc42 couldn’t ascertain the number of employees impacted by the layoff exercise, a report by ET said 1,000 employees have lost their jobs. Paytm, without disclosing the number of employees impacted, confirmed the layoffs in a statement.

“We are transforming our operations with AI-powered automation to drive efficiency, eliminating repetitive tasks and roles to drive efficiency across growth and costs, resulting in a slight reduction in our workforce in operations and marketing. We will be able to save 10-15% in employee costs as AI has delivered more than we expected it to,” the company told Inc42.

December 20 | Inc42 Exclusive: ShareChat Fires Nearly 200 Employees

In the second round of retrenchments in 2023, ShareChat fired around 200 employees to cut costs, sources told Inc42. The startup confirmed the development with Inc42. 

In a statement, it said that the “comprehensive restructuring effort”, which impacted 15% of the company’s workforce15%, was aimed at streamlining operations, enhancing productivity, and positioning the company for sustainable growth. 

“ShareChat, today undertook a strategic restructuring as part of its annual planning for the year 2024. The decision reflects the company’s commitment to streamlining its cost base and achieving profitability within the next 4-6 quarters,” the statement said. The startup did not disclose the severance pay that will be paid to the impacted employees.

December 18 | Udaan Fires 120 Employees A Week After Raising $340 Mn

Bengaluru-based B2B ecommerce unicorn Udaan fired close to 120 employees, just within a week after scooping up $340 Mn in its Series E funding round. Per media reports, the downsizing majorly affected staff across marketing, finance and operations.

Confirming the development, a Udaan spokesperson said that the company is working towards providing all requisite support to the impacted employees, which includes medical insurance and compensation packages.

“We have already made significant progress in our journey towards building a profitable business and continue to make relevant interventions to our already proven business model while remaining customer-centric and agile. However, these interventions have also resulted in some redundancies in the system,” the spokesperson added.

December 14 | Third Wave Coffee Fires 80+ Employees

Bengaluru-based coffee QSR chain Third Wave Coffee sacked around 10% of its workforce in a restructuring exercise. The layoff exercise impacted almost all the departments in the company, sources told Inc42, adding that over 80 employees lost their jobs in this exercise.

In a statement, Third Wave Coffee confirmed the layoffs with Inc42. “TWC, post a strategic review, has decided on a one-time restructuring exercise to consolidate our teams, impacting less than 10% of the organisation. As an organisation, we are in a strong position post the recent fundraise. We will continue to scale and build TWC as India’s most loved coffee brand.”

However, neither did the startup address Inc42’s queries on pending vendor payments nor did it share details about the severance package being offered to the impacted employees.

December 6 | Inc42 Exclusive: Simplilearn Fires 200 Employees Citing Poor Performance

Bengaluru-based edtech startup Simplilearn fired around 200 employees citing their poor performance, sources told Inc42. The layoffs affected employees at various levels, with the sales team being hit the hardest. Other departments, including marketing and operations, were also impacted by the layoffs.

While Simplilearn told the employees that they were being sacked based on their performance, some of the impacted employees claimed that it happened abruptly and the startup hadn’t conducted any performance reviews recently.

Without confirming the number of laid-off employees, Simplilearn said that performance-based exits do take place. “Our business is going as per the plan, we are hiring on a need basis across teams. Sometimes, performance-based exits do occur,” a company spokesperson told Inc42.

December 6 | ZestMoney To Shut Down By December-End, Fires 150 Employees

Fintech startup ZestMoney is about to shut down as the efforts of the new management to revive the company failed to materialise. The fintech startup will wrap up operations by the end of December and lay off its entire workforce of 150 employees.

The development has come after the company failed to raise a follow-on round or find a buyer to save its sinking ship. Meanwhile, the company has promised two months of severance payments and outplacement support to the outgoing employees.

The shutdown comes after the company’s original cofounders, Lizzie Chapman, Priya Sharma, and Ashish Anantharaman, quit the startup in May this year. The leadership team resigned after the acquisition talks with the fintech major PhonePe went awry. At the time, the company had to trim 30% of its workforce.

November 30 | Krafton-Backed Loco Fires 36% Workforce Amid GST Woes

Game streaming platform Loco laid off 40 employees, or around 36% of its workforce, as part of the company’s realignment process. 

Loco’s founders Anirudh Pandita and Ashwin Suresh announced the layoffs during a recent town hall, stating it was part of the company’s restructuring plan, even as they aimed to expand operations globally.

Suresh told Inc42 that after a recent strategic review, they decided to focus on transaction-based monetisation and operate with a leaner cost structure. Moving ahead, Loco will concentrate exclusively on core objectives, including monetisation.

Last year, Loco raised $42 Mn (INR 330 Cr) in its Series A funding round led by South Korea’s early-stage venture fund Hashed. The startup also counts Krafton and Lumikai as its other investors.

November 20 | Inc42 Exclusive: Jodo Sacks 100 Employees As Business Outlook Falters

Jodo laid off around 100 employees in a cost-cutting exercise on the back of lower-than-expected business growth, multiple sources told Inc42.

The layoffs took place across departments, including engineering, data, customer success, product management, and sales. New employees, as well as those drawing high salaries, were impacted by the retrenchment exercise.

The educational fee management startup held a virtual town hall meeting on November 17, during which its founders informed the employees that Jodo would need to cut down its costs to sustain itself over the coming months. The founders also said that the startup failed to achieve the business targets for this year, the sources said.

An email sent to the founders of Jodo regarding the layoffs didn’t elicit any response.

November 19 | PhysicsWallah Lays Off Around 120 Employees

Edtech unicorn PhysicsWallah (PW) laid off around 70-120 employees, less than 1% of its workforce. While reports suggest that the move was part of a cost-cutting exercise, the company claimed that these layoffs were due to performance issues.

“At PW, we regularly assess performance through mid-term and end-term cycles. For the cycle ending in October, less than 0.8% of our workforce, ranging from 70 to 120 individuals with performance concerns, may be asked to transition. Our primary focus remains on fostering a dynamic, high-performing team,” the CHRO of PW, Satish Khengre, said.

Khengre added that the edtech unicorn plans to hire an additional 1,000 employees in the next six months. “We deeply value the dedication of our existing employees and recognise their integral role in shaping the future of education technology,” he added.

October 26 | Inc42 Exclusive: Unacademy’s Graphy Cuts 20-30% Jobs

Unacademy-owned SaaS platform Graphy culled 20-30% of its workforce, or nearly 50 employees, multiple sources privy to the development told Inc42

Graphy, which offers learning management system services to creators in the edtech space, has been struggling to hit the revenue target, leading to a restructuring within the firm, Inc42 learned from sources.

In a statement sent to Inc42, an Unacademy representative stated that the job cuts happened on the basis of performance and had nothing to do with layoffs or revenue growth plans.

“We have not done any layoffs, and we remain focussed on enhancing our team’s performance and overall productivity so we can continue to compound our growth,” a Graphy spokesperson said.

October 16 | Inc42 Exclusive: CityMall Fires Another 90 Employees

Nearly 16 months after undergoing its first retrenchment round, social commerce unicorn CityMall conducted its second round of layoffs on October 16, terminating around 90 employees, sources privy to the development told Inc42

The layoffs impacted nearly all departments within the company. CityMall provided a month’s salary as severance pay. As per sources, the layoffs happened as a result of a cost-cutting exercise and on investors’ directives.

Inc42 also found out that while the startup had been conducting layoffs in smaller groups since June this year, the October 15 layoff round was the most significant since last year.

October 12 | Adda247 Joins The Edtech Layoff Spree, Fires 250-300 Employees To Extend Runway

Google-backed Adda247 fired around 250-300 employees across multiple verticals as it looked to extend its runway amid the ongoing funding winter. 

According to Entrackr, Adda247 also laid off 100-150 employees at its UPSC-focussed test prep vertical, StudyIQ. The edtech startup fired another 150 employees from sales, content, and faculty teams. 

Inc42’s email to the startup did not elicit a response.

As per the report, the layoffs were undertaken because the edtech player doesn’t expect the investment environment for the sector to improve. The employees were told to resign without any prior notice. 

October 5 | Bizongo Lays Off 50 Employees A Day After Announcing $50 Mn Funding Round

Just a day after raising $50 Mn, B2B vendor management platform Bizongo fired nearly 50 employees. The layoffs could likely be attributed to the company’s growing focus on profitability. 

In a statement to Inc42, Bizongo said the move is part of its focus on driving key business goals.

“We are driving sharper focus towards key business goals, and in lieu of this, we have reallocated our people. Parting ways with people is never easy, and these are difficult decisions. We are fully committed to extending support to affected employees to the best of our abilities,” a Bizongo spokesperson said.

September 26 | Embattled Edtech BYJU’S Announces 4,000 Job Cuts

BYJU’S announced to lay off around 4,000 employees as part of a restructuring exercise amid a severe cash crunch, sources told Inc42. The layoffs were to be restricted to Think & Learn Private Ltd, the parent of BYJU’S, sources said.

“…indications of such layoffs have been given to the employees. This is the only way to move forward,” one of the sources said. The layoff exercise will also impact senior employees and team managers. 

A BYJU’S spokesperson confirmed that the edtech company will be undertaking a restructuring exercise but did not disclose the number of employees who will be impacted by it. 

September 21 | DealShare Shuts B2B Biz, Fires Another 100 Employees

DealShare discontinued its B2B business and fired over 100 employees as part of this process, sources told Inc42. The unicorn confirmed the development to Inc42. DealShare said it is moving its operations to Gurugram and consolidating its business to focus on the Jaipur, Delhi NCR, Lucknow, and Kolkata markets.

“We also took a conscious decision to focus on B2C business at this point to stay relevant to our consumers in the market. We have taken decisions about realigning our budgets, reorganising teams and locations, etc.,” a company spokesperson said in a statement. 

The development came almost two months after DealShare cofounder and CEO Vineet Rao stepped down from his role. 

September 11 | Chargebee Fires 10% Workforce In 2nd Round Of Layoffs

Chennai-based SaaS unicorn Chargebee laid off 10% of its workforce, affecting 100 to 120 employees across multiple departments.

Chargebee CEO Krish Subramanian cited ‘market shifts’ as the primary reason behind the layoffs. The company said that it would provide severance packages in accordance with the relevant labour laws in each country.

The latest layoffs come almost ten months after the company sacked approximately 142 employees due to volatile economic conditions.

September 1 | Khatabook Fires Over 40 Employees

Peak XV Partners-backed fintech startup Khatabook sacked more than 40 employees to cut costs and turn profitable. The impacted employees were from sales, marketing, analytics, and tech teams.

The startup offered a three-month salary as a severance package to the impacted employees, including pay, stock option vesting, health insurance extensions, and other job search-related support, the startup told Inc42.

Khatabook has raised $187 Mn to date, including $100 Mn from Tribe Capital and Moore Strategic Ventures in its Series C round. It counts B Capital, Peak XV Partners, and Better Capital among its investors.

August 30 | Inc42 Exclusive: Shiprocket-Owned Omuni Fires 35% Workforce

Shiprocket-owned retail SaaS platform Omuni laid off around 60-70 employees, or nearly 35% of its workforce, sources told Inc42. 

The retrenchment exercise, which took place in the second week of August, impacted employees from the tech, product, sales, and talent acquisition teams.

Omuni is giving a salary of two months as severance pay to the outgoing employees.

Besides, Inc42 learned that Omuni CEO and cofounder Mukul Bafna and CTO Sumeet Chandhok were also planning to step down.

August 29 | CoinSwitch Fires 44 Employees Amid Regulatory Hiccups

Tiger Global-backed crypto exchange CoinsSwitch laid off 44 employees as part of a restructuring exercise. The layoffs predominantly impacted the customer support team.

As per the company, the layoffs took place earlier this month, with impacted employees ‘voluntarily resigning’ from their positions. The unicorn did not share any details of the severance packages the outgoing employees would be eligible for.

The job cuts come at a time when the entire crypto ecosystem has been reeling under the impact of a hefty taxation regime. Be it a 30% tax on gains from the sale of virtual digital assets (VDAs) or a 1% tax deducted at source (TDS) for all crypto transactions worth INR 10,000 and above, the crypto industry has been mired in regulatory uncertainty.

August 29 | Kenko Health Fires Over 20% Of Employees

Bengaluru-based healthcare financing startup Kenko Health trimmed at least 20% of its workforce (around 80 employees). The layoffs impacted employees from support, processing, sales, and tech teams in the Delhi NCR and Bengaluru offices, sources told Inc42. The move to cut jobs has been attributed to the ongoing funding crunch and Kenko’s failure to generate consistent revenues.

There are no details of any severance package being offered to the impacted employee.

The recent round of layoffs comes more than a year after the startup raised $12 Mn in its Series A funding round led by Peak XV Partners, with participation from BEENEXT, Orios, 9Unicorns and Waveform.

August 26 | Cuemath Fires Another 100 Employees To Cut Costs

Peak XV-backed edtech startup Cuemath fired another 100 employees to cut costs. 

“Unfortunately, our revenue and cost trajectories are still divergent from expectations, and our problems are compounded by the bad macro situation around capital availability, particularly for edtech,” Cuemath founder and CEO Manan Khurma told the employees in an email on Friday (August 25), as per a Moneycontrol report.

Inc42’s email to Cuemath did not elicit a response.

The development comes three months after the Bengaluru-based edtech startup fired around 100 employees in May this year, within a year of raising $57 Mn. After the May layoffs, Khurma reportedly told the Cuemath employees that there wouldn’t be any need for more layoffs. 

August 24 | Chingari Sacks Over 50% Employees In Second Round Of Layoffs

Cash-strapped short-video platform Chingari laid off more than 50% of its workforce in a second round of layoffs within two months, sources told Inc42. The layoffs impacted employees from teams like product, customer support, design, and marketing. 

Following the latest round of layoffs, Chingari is now left with only 50-60 employees, as per sources. Besides layoffs, Chingari has also asked some of its employees to take pay cuts of up to 50%. 

August 19 | Gaming Startup Spartan Poker Fires 40% Workforce Amid GST Pressure

Spartan Poker fired 125 employees or 40% of its total workforce, as it grapples with the new 28% tax regime. It was not immediately clear, which departments were impacted by the company’s retrenchment move. 

There is no clarity if the company offered any severance package to the impacted employees. 

Founded by Amin Rozani, Sameer Rattonsey and Peter Abraham in 2014, Spartan Poker is an online poker platform that allows gaming enthusiasts to play poker tournaments online across various formats.

August 10 | Hike Fires 22% Employees Amid GST Pressure

Web3 gaming startup Hike, which pivoted from instant messaging, fired 22% of its workforce, about 55 people, following the GST Council’s decision to charge a 28% GST on online gaming.

People familiar with the development told Inc42 that the retrenchments came as the gaming company was staring at a 400% increase in tax burden. While sources said as many as 100 employees were impacted, Hike’s founder and CEO Kavin Mittal told Inc42 that nearly 55 people have been laid off by the company.

“…Business is in the best shape ever but this 400% increase in GST is a bazooka pointed at us. We’ll need to absorb some of it and as a result, the RIF [reduction in force] at Hike/Rush,” Mittal said.

Meanwhile, there was no information available on the teams impacted and any severance benefits the outgoing employees were entitled to.

August 8 | MPL Fires 350 Employees Following The 28% GST Regime

Gaming unicorn Mobile Premier League (MPL) decided to slash 350 jobs to cut costs following the GST Council’s decision to levy a 28% tax on online gaming. The move comes more than a year after the startup fired 100 employees in May 2022.

In an internal mail, MPL cofounder and CEO Sai Srinivas said that the startup would lay off about 350 employees. Placing the blame squarely on the levy of 28% GST on full face value for real-money gaming, Srinivas told employees that the new levy has increased the tax burden on the company by as much as 350-400%.

Srinivas also told employees that the company spent a ‘lot of time evaluating and re-evaluating’ the layoffs. He added that the unicorn eventually decided that ‘the sooner we are able to deliver certainty to everyone, the better’.

However, no details were available on the teams affected and any severance benefits the outgoing employees were entitled to.

August 3 | Spinny Lays Off 300 Employees Post Merger

Spinny downsized around 4.5% of its total workforce, approximately 300 employees, out of a total of 6,500 after the merger of Truebil and Spinny Max with its main Spinny platform.

“This business reorganisation will strengthen our go-to-market business model, reduce costs and improve our margin profile, putting us on an expedited path to profitability. However, it will impact approximately 4.5% of our total workforce as we consolidate our operations under a single brand,” the company told Inc42.

The used cars marketplace did not share any information regarding the teams impacted by the layoffs, or whether the impacted employees were entitled to any severance benefits following the retrenchments.

August 2 | SaaS Startup Actyv.ai Fires 60 Employees

SaaS startup Actyv.ai fired 60 employees or around 50% of its 120-strong workforce, impacting employees from the product, marketing, HR, sales and solutions teams at Actyv.ai, sources told Inc42.

Actvy.ai fired the employees during a town hall meeting on July 31, the sources said, adding that the startup offered one month’s salary as severance pay to the impacted employees.

Raghu Subramanian, founder and global CEO of the startup, said, “We value the dedication and commitment of each team member during this transition period, and we believe that these measures will position us for a stronger and more resilient future.”

The development comes months after the SaaS startup announced the close of a $12 Mn (INR 96 Cr) Pre-Series A funding round from Singapore-based 1Digi Ventures and Subramanian’s family office in January 2023.

August 1 | Inc42 Exclusive: Increff Lays Off 20% Workforce To Cut Costs

Premji Invest-backed SaaS startup Increff laid off around 60 employees or 20% of its workforce in a cost-cutting exercise. The employees were from the tech, sales, customer success, and HR teams, among others.

Responding to Inc42’s queries on the development, Increff CEO and cofounder Rajul Jain confirmed the layoffs. Per Inc42 sources, adverse macroeconomic conditions and failure to meet the targets for onboarding new clients led to the layoffs. There was no information made available by the startup regarding any severance benefits.

Last year, it raised $12 Mn in a Series B round, which saw participation from Premji Invest, Binny Bansal’s 021 Capital, among others. Earlier, in 2017, it raised around $2 Mn from Sequoia Capital (now Peak XV Partners).

July 14 | Skill-Lync Fires 225 Employees In Another Round Of Layoffs

Skill-Lync conducted a second round of layoffs which impacted nearly 20% of its workforce or around 225 employees. There was no clarity on which specific teams and positions were impacted as part of the mass firings.

“This decision was not taken lightly, and we have done our utmost to ensure that the process was as transparent and fair as possible for the employees involved,” said Skill-Lync cofounder Suryanarayanan Paneerselvam in a statement to Techcrunch. 

In April this year, the Chennai-headquartered startup slashed more than 400 jobs, blaming macroeconomic conditions.

July 13 | Sachin Bansal-Led Fintech Navi Fires 200 Employees

IPO-bound fintech startup Navi Technologies reportedly has fired around 200 employees across multiple departments. Per media reports, product development and management teams have seen up to 70% of members impacted by the layoffs at Navi.

A spokesperson for the fintech unicorn attributed the layoffs to a routine performance appraisal. “Navi conducts performance appraisals twice a year, which results in expected departures from the company,” said the spokesperson. Navi did not respond to Inc42’s query related to any severance to which the impacted employees would be entitled.

The move comes days after Navi’s NBFC arm, Navi Finserv, started raising up to INR 500 Cr through the public issue of Non-Convertible Debentures (NCDs). The debt raise opened on July 10, and the subscriptions will close on July 21.

View Inc42 Layoff Tracker

July 12 | WayCool Fires 300 Employees To Chase Profitability

Agritech startup WayCool fired 300 employees in a restructuring exercise to chase profitability. The agritech startup will also shut down some of its distribution centres and a few new experimental projects.

“We plan to focus on our core and profitable businesses, slowing down on some of our experimental initiatives as we work to grow further. This will change the profile of our business but is aimed at ensuring a sustainable and long-term success of our enterprise,” a WayCool spokesperson told Inc42.

The layoffs come nearly 18 months after WayCool raised $117 Mn in January 2022 in the largest-ever agritech funding round.

June 19 | Inc42 Exclusive: Chingari Lays Off 20% Workforce, Pivots Content Model

Short-video app Chingari fired 20% of its workforce weeks after Chingari cofounder Aditya Kothari quit the startup. While employees across teams lost their jobs, the tech team was impacted the most. The layoffs specifically affected employees at the startup’s Mumbai and Bengaluru offices.

“We deeply regret the need for these workforce reductions of 20% as a part of Chingari’s organisational restructuring,” a Chingari spokesperson said.

Chingari has offered a two-month salary as severance pay to the laid off employees and extended their health insurance by three months.

Shortly after the layoffs, Inc42 also exclusively reported Chingari’s apparent pivot into the NSFW territory with paid live 1-on-1 calls between creators and users. The app has introduced the feature in an apparent bid to increase monetisation on the platform.

June 17 | Mojocare Fires 80% Workforce, Misconduct Allegations Surface Against Founders

Healthtech startup Mojocare fired more than 80% of its workforce as part of its cost rationalisation drive and focus on profitability. While media reports suggested a number of more than 200 employees being impacted, a spokesperson of the startup pegged the number at 150-170 employees. 

The development comes nearly 10 months after Mojocare raised a funding of $20.6 Mn from the likes of B Capital, Chiratae Ventures, Sequoia India’s Surge and Better Capital.

Shortly after the layoffs, Mojocare’s founders admitted before the board and investors of the startup that they had fudged numbers. Sources told Inc42 that Mojocare founders approached investors in May and confessed to round-tripping of funds.

For now, the group of investors has appointed an interim CFO, asked the founders to step away, and is considering a legal action against the founders. As for Mojocare, the startup’s operations have been suspended and it is staring down the barrel of dissolution.

June 14 | Mamaearth To Shut Momspresso’s MyMoney, Brand Marketing Vertical; 80 Employees Impacted

IPO-bound D2C unicorn Mamaearth will shut Momspresso MyMoney, the influencer engagement platform of Momspresso, later this month due to the latter’s mounting losses, sources told Inc42. The move led to 80 employees at Momspresso being fired.

According to Inc42 sources, in a town hall meeting in the first week of April, Momspresso’s top management, including the cofounders, informed the employees about the decision to shutter MyMoney. The D2C beauty unicorn is also likely to shut Momspresso’s brand marketing business, multiple sources informed us.

Mamaearth acquired the parenting platform Momspresso in 2021 for INR 152.3 Cr. The platform currently operates three verticals – user-generated content platform, brand marketing, and MyMoney.

June 12 | Freshworks Fires Employees For The Third Time

Freshworks has seen another round of layoffs across multiple teams in the US, citing performance reviews. The layoffs have happened within senior positions in the SaaS unicorn’s product, engineering and go-to-market (GTM) teams, sources told Moneycontrol.

When Inc42 reached out to the listed SaaS unicorn for clarification, a spokesperson said, “Freshworks does not comment on the management of the workforce in our normal course of business. There have been no organisation-wide layoffs to report.”

Freshworks fired around 2% of its staff – around 90 employees – in December 2022. While there were no confirmations from the SaaS unicorn on the number of impacted employees during the second layoff round in March, media reports indicated around 114-125 staff being impacted.

June 1 | Glamyo Health Joins Indian Startup Layoff Spree

Glamyo Health reportedly fired employees without any prior notice or without any clarity on final salary settlements, according to a police complaint cited by a YourStory report. The complaint, filed by an employee at Barakhamba Road police station in New Delhi, reportedly also claims that Glamyo Health delayed salary payments ‘several times’ over the last few months.

“About 50 employees were let go in the last two months with the aim of cutting costs and containing losses. But almost all the employees were asked to leave in the last two days without any information of severance, salaries or reasoning,” the report quoted a former employee as saying.

A legal representative of Glamyo was cited as terming the claims ‘baseless allegations’, as Inc42 did not hear back from the startup till the time of publishing of the article.

May 30 | Mensa Brands Cuts Jobs From Recently Acquired India Lifestyle Network 

House of Brands unicorn Mensa Brands laid off around 30 employees from India Lifestyle Network (ILN), which it acquired in December last year.

A spokesperson of Mensa Brands told Inc42 in a statement, “ILN is committed to providing the best content to its consumers and industry-leading services to its client partners. To enhance efficiency post-integration, we restructured some teams that impacted a few positions. This activity affected less than 30 team members in ILN.”

The Mensa spokesperson said the startup is providing each of the impacted employees up to three months’ salary, extended health insurance and support in finding new roles.

May 25 | Inc42 Exclusive: Prosus-Backed Airmeet Lays Off 75 Employees

Virtual events platform Airmeet fired about 30% of its 250-300 people workforce or at least 75 employees, sources told Inc42. The layoffs impacted multiple teams, including sales, marketing, tech, and operations. Besides India, employees working in the US, and Europe, among others, were also impacted by the layoffs.

In an internal mail, Lalit Mangal, cofounder and CEO of Airmeet, said the startup had to lay off employees as its ‘execution’ was not yielding the desired outcomes. Inc42 has accessed the mail sent by Mangal. Mangal confirmed the layoffs with Inc42 but didn’t disclose the number of employees impacted.

The startup has offered two months of salary as severance pay to the Indian employees and acceleration of vesting of all ESOPs options till June 30, 2023. It will also extend its health insurance coverage for these employees till August 18, 2023.

The layoffs came more than a year after Airmeet raised $35 Mn in its Series B funding round from Prosus Ventures, Sistema Asia Fund, RingCentral Ventures, KDDI Open Innovation Fund, DG Daiwa Ventures and Nexxus Global.

May 12 | Inc42 Exclusive: CRED-Owned Happay Cuts 35% Workforce

Fintech unicorn CRED-owned Happay has reduced its workforce by approximately 35%, sources told Inc42. At least 160 employees across various departments, including sales, marketing, tech, product and operations were let go as part of a restructuring exercise.

While sources told Inc42 that the restructuring was related to employee performance and was part of the appraisal process, Happay did not revert to a detailed questionnaire till press time.

As part of the severance package, the startup is offering employees three months’ salary along with additional benefits, such as an extension of insurance coverage and job placement assistance.

The layoffs come after Kunal Shah’s CRED spent $180 Mn on acquiring Happay in December 2021.

May 8 | Gold Loans Startup Rupeek Fires 20 More Employees Citing Restructuring

Sequoia-backed Gold loans startup Rupeek fired 20 more employees, around 2% of its workforce, as it looks to become profitable amid an ongoing funding crunch.

A Rupeek spokesperson told Inc42, “We have witnessed strong growth and efficiency gains that take us closer to becoming profitable. As we continue to assess the volatile market situation and take strategic and proactive steps to adapt, it is necessary to maintain a leaner and more agile organisation. Unfortunately, this also meant that we had to make the difficult decision to part ways with less than 2% of our workforce.”

The startup incurred a total loss of INR 364.3 Cr in FY22, a 2.3X jump from INR 156.3 Cr in FY21, while Rupeek saw its total revenue climb to INR 132.4 Cr in FY22, a 49% jump from INR 88.5 Cr in FY21.

May 8 | Edtech Startup Cuemath Fires 100 Employees Citing Restructuring

Cuemath restructured its management and laid off its employees, with founder Manan Khurma returning as its full-time CEO. According to media reports and Inc42 sources, the company has fired around 100 employees.

“Some functions and roles will also be rationalised to reflect our increased focus on LCX and retention. While this will impact some talented people who have contributed a lot to Cuemath, we are committed to supporting our affected colleagues with everything they need to ensure a smooth transition into the next phase of their professional journey,” Khurma said on LinkedIn.

The development comes less than a year after the edtech raised $57 Mn in June 2022, as it saw its standalone losses reach INR 216.6 Cr in FY22.

May 5 | Inc42 Exclusive: Edtech Startup Teachmint Fires 70 Employees

Teachmint conducted its second round of layoffs since the onset of funding winter, having fired over 70 employees, sources told Inc42. Employees working in talent acquisition, tech, and support roles; and quality analysts were impacted during this round of layoff.

Employees were informed about the layoffs in a town hall held by the top management, including founders, on May 4, sources privy to the matter informed Inc42. Teachmint confirmed the layoffs to Inc42 without disclosing the number of impacted employees.

In a statement, the startup said that they are working to provide support to the impacted employees. The layoffs come after the startup’s net loss surged 24X to INR 131.7 Cr in FY22 from INR 5.5 Cr in FY21, while its revenue from operations stood at INR 77.45 Lakhs in FY22. The startup’s first year of operations was FY22.

May 5 | Meesho Fires 251 Employees In Third Round Of Layoffs

Ecommerce unicorn Meesho fired 251 employees or about 15% of its present workforce of 1,675 as a part of a cost-cutting exercise. The ecommerce giant’s cofounder and CEO Vidit Aatrey informed the employees of the decision in an email earlier on May 5.

“As leaders, we made judgement errors in over-hiring ahead of the curve. At the same time, we could have run our org structure in a more effective and lean manner overall,” said Aatrey in the email. This was Meesho’s third round of layoffs, having fired 450 employees over two layoffs in 2022 before.

A Meesho spokesperson told Inc42 that the exiting employees will be entitled to a separation package that includes a one-time payment of 2.5-9 months, depending on the tenure and designation, insurance benefits, job placement support and accelerated vesting of ESOPs by one year.

April 29 | Data Startup Cogito Laid Off 177 Employees 

New York and Delhi NCR-based automation startup Cogito fired 177 employees after the project they were working on was scrapped, leading to protests by the impacted employees who claimed they were not paid any remunerations before being let go.

Speaking with Inc42, Cogito CTO Rohit Agrawal said, “Due to the current market environment, a client of ours decided to abruptly ramp down their operations,” which led to the 177 employees working on the project being let go.

He further refuted the employees’ claims and added that every employee was paid April salaries and they were satisfied with the company’s actions.

April 26 | Inc42 Exclusive: Edtech Startup Extramarks Fires 300 Employees

Edtech platform Extramarks laid off over 300 employees in a restructuring exercise as it is looking to shut down its B2C vertical, sources told Inc42. While most of the employees let go were from the closing B2C vertical, employees from sales, customer support, HR, marketing, tech, and content teams were also impacted.

While Extramarks has stopped onboarding new students for its B2C vertical, it would continue to provide its services to the existing students.

The company did not respond to Inc42’s queries. In an internal mail seen by Inc42, the startup said it would pay the laid off employees salary till April 20 and an additional pay as per their respective notice periods.

April 25 | Inc42 Exclusive: Skill-Lync Lays Off 400 Employees

Skill-Lync, which provides job opportunities to students upon completion of the programme, fired over 400 employees in a restructuring exercise, sources told Inc42. The impacted employees were from sales, marketing, pre-sales, tech and talent acquisition departments.

Skill-Lync cofounder SuryaNarayanan PaneerSelvam informed the employees about the layoffs in an internal mail and attributed it to the “recent macroeconomic conditions”. Inc42 has accessed the mail sent by PaneerSelvam. “This doesn’t reflect in any way on the performance of the individual,” the cofounder wrote in the mail.

The startup offered severance packages to the laid off employees based on their respective notice periods. Besides, Skill-Lync also closed the shutters of its Delhi NCR office post the latest layoff round, the sources told Inc42.

April 20 | Neobanking Unicorn OPEN Fires 47 Employees Citing Performance

Neobanking unicorn OPEN laid off 47 employees based on performance evaluation, the company said. OPEN also said that all four of its cofounders have taken a 50% salary cut. However, it added no other employee will be subjected to any such pay cuts.

“While 47 Openers were exited based on performance, the company is actively recruiting for critical functions such as growth marketing, product, and sales functions to continue growing the business and better serve its customers,” OPEN said in a statement.

“As a part of scale up and profitability, OPEN will continue the efforts to make a highly performance-oriented effective organisation fit for scale and is one of the very few startups with visibility on profitability and runway above 30 months to well face the market conditions,” said the cofounder Anish Achuthan.

The startup has offered a one-month notice period worth of salary to the impacted employees.

April 19 | BNPL Soonicorn Simpl Fires 120-150 Employees In A Cost-Cutting Exercise

BNPL platform Simpl fired an undisclosed number of employees, though media outlets have reported between 120 and 150 people impacted by the layoffs. It was not immediately clear as to which teams were impacted by the layoffs.

“In lieu of the current economic condition and preparing for the new economic reality, we’ve re-looked at our headcount towards becoming a leaner and agile organisation. We are sincerely grateful to the employees for their valuable contribution,” a Simpl spokesperson told Inc42.

Simpl’s cofounder and CEO Nitya Sharma reportedly did a virtual town hall and informed employees that the move would help the startup extend its runway. The startup has offered a severance package to the outgoing employees, though it did not share the details of the package with Inc42.

April 17 | FamPay Sees Top Level Exits, Fires Employees Amid Funding Crunch

Teen-focused fintech platform FamPay fired employees as it looks to extend its runway amid an ongoing funding winter. The startup also saw head of engineering Shobhit Gupta, Brijesh Bhardwaj, who oversaw product and growth and Fatema Raja, who led the design team, resign from the startup.

While media reports suggested that FamPay fired up to 50 employees, the startup’s founder said in a tweet that that less than 10 employees have been impacted by the retrenchments.

FamPay saw its loss widen to INR 50 Cr in FY23 from INR 43.3 Cr reported in the previous fiscal. The fintech company posted a meagre INR 3 Cr in operating revenue in the year ended March 2022.

April 14 | Inc42 Exclusive: Drip Capital Fires 20% Staff Without A Clear Reason

Trade financing startup Drip Capital laid off about 20% of its 400-member workforce in November last year in a restructuring exercise, sources told Inc42. The tech, engineering and sales departments took the biggest hit in the retrenchments.

The sources told Inc42 that the startup did not give a clear reason for the layoffs, and when Inc42 reached out to the startup on the matter, it declined to comment. The sources said that CEO Pushkar Mukewar announced the business restructuring plan during a town hall meeting with all employees in mid-November last year.

Within hours, the impacted employees were separately asked to resign over emails. Drip Capital gave a two-month salary as severance pay to the impacted employees and it cleared the full and final payments within 15 days.

April 10 | EV Maker Euler Motors Fires 10% Workforce Six Months After Raising $60 Mn

EV manufacturer Euler Motors has laid off 10% of its employees across departments citing restructuring. While the company’s LinkedIn page shows around 500 employees, taking the number of impacted employees to 50, an Inc42 source said the number was between 180 and 200.

“We are restructuring our company to better deliver to customers as well as to investor expectations of greater efficiency in the context of changing global circumstances,” said a company spokesperson in a statement on Monday (April 10).

The startup claimed that it has provided “appropriate” severance to the laid-off employees. The layoffs come after its net loss almost doubled to INR 36.3 Cr in FY22.

April 8 | Healthech Major Practo Fires 41 Employees

Practo fired 41 employees as part of its performance management and planning process. In a statement sent to Inc42, the startup confirmed the development saying that it will provide all required support to the impacted employees.

At the same time, the company claimed that it was not undergoing any restructuring exercise and that the employees were handed pink slips over performance issues.

“… as part of our continuous performance management and planning process, we had to part ways with 41 employees in accordance with their employment contracts. As always, we are and will remain fully committed to providing the requisite support to all employees who may be impacted,” a company spokesperson said.

April 7 | ZestMoney Fires 20-30% Workforce As PhonePe Deal Collapses

ZestMoney has laid off between 20% and 30% of its workforce as part of a cost-cutting exercise after PhonePe cancelled its plan to acquire the BNPL platform. While Inc42 sources said the number was close to 30%, other media outlets reported a number close to 20%, translating to about 100 employees impacted across departments.

Sources further said a sizeable chunk of the employees are moving to PhonePe, even as the fintech decacorn pulled the plug on the deal to buy ZestMoney over multiple issues, including due-diligence issues, disagreements over valuation, sustainability of the business and the shareholding structure.

ZestMoney has paid the impacted employees one month’s salary as severance pay and other benefits like insurance and mental health assistance.

April 6 | Dunzo Fires 30% Staff In Second Layoffs In Three Months

Dunzo went for another round of layoffs within three months as it fired 30% of its employees ahead of a business model shift. Reportedly, the number of impacted employees comes to around 300.

Following the layoffs, the quick commerce unicorn will shut down 50% of its dark stores and run only those which can either be profitable or are close to being profitable. Dunzo will partner with supermarkets and other merchants wherever it shuts down dark stores.

The unicorn’s consolidated loss in FY22 widened 2X to INR 464 Cr from INR 229 Cr in FY21 on the back of a doubling of its expenses.

April 4 | 1K Kirana Fires 40% Employees Citing Restructuring

Gurugram-based Kirana tech startup 1K Kirana fired 40% of its workforce, citing a restructuring and closure of operations in a few regions.

As per the startup’s LinkedIn page, it had 1,052 employees at the beginning of April, taking the impacted employees to 421. However, media reports suggest the number could be more than 600 employees.

In a statement shared with Inc42, 1K Kirana cofounder Kumar Sangeetesh said, “We are currently in the process of restructuring as our growth forecasts have changed. We are changing our focus areas and moving out of a few geographies. Due to this, we have to let go of 40% of our employees. All the employees will be given severances and we will assist them with outplacements.”

The development comes less than a year after the startup raised $25 Mn in a Series B funding round in May 2022.

March 30 | Temasek-Backed Blue-Collar Jobs Platform GoodWorker Fires 90% Staff Ahead Of Acquisition

Bengaluru-based blue-collar job discovery platform GoodWorker, backed by the likes of Temasek, fired 90% of its employees, per a DealStreetAsia report. The retrenchments have impacted employees across departments.

Per the startup’s LinkedIn page, it has 190 employees, therefore, the retrenchments could have impacted as many as 171 employees. GoodWorker has also been reportedly acquired by Affinidi, a Singapore-based decentralised identity verification platform, which is also backed by Temasek.

Interestingly, GoodWorker is a joint venture between SchoolNet and LemmaTree, and the latter is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Temasek. As such, the retrenchments and the fire sale seems to have been orchestrated by the Singapore-based investor.

March 30 | Unacademy Fires 12% Of Workforce In Fourth Round Of Layoffs In 12 Months

Unacademy fired 12% of its workforce in the fourth round of layoffs at the edtech unicorn. While media outlets reported a number of around 380 employees, according to Inc42 data, the number would be around 540, post the three layoffs it has done before.

In a Slack message sent to the team, Unacademy CEO and cofounder Gaurav Munjal said, “We have taken every step in the right direction to make our core business profitable, yet it’s not enough. We have to go further, we have to go deeper.”

He added, “Unfortunately, this has led me to take another difficult decision. We will be reducing the size of our team by 12% to ensure that we can meet the goals we are chasing in the current realities we face.”

The outgoing employees will be eligible for a severance pay equivalent to the notice period and an additional month’s pay, along with accelerated vesting of one year for employees that were with Unacademy for at least one year.

March 30 | Inc42 Exclusive: FanClash Fires 75% Workforce Following Business Model Pivot

Delhi NCR-based fantasy esports startup FanClash laid off around 75% of its workforce this year, according to Inc42 sources. The startup undertook the layoff exercise in three rounds and fired about 100 employees, the sources said.

Apart from firing employees, the startup also shut down FanGuild, a fantasy Web3 gaming platform, and halted operations of its fan engagement platform FanSpace.

“Considering the temporary uncertain environment towards mobile esports, we had no option but to restructure our business which meant that we had to ask 75% of our workforce to leave,” said a company source, requesting anonymity.

Inc42 sources added that the impacted employees were given a two-month salary as a severance package.

March 17 | Freshworks Goes For Round Two Of Layoffs

Freshworks undertook a fresh round of retrenchments, a second round of layoffs in the past three months. Without specifying the number of employees impacted in the exercise, Freshworks said that the move has been made to strengthen organisational and operational efficiencies.

“Freshworks has not conducted org-wide layoffs and continues to hire for open positions. We continue to review organisational efficiencies to avoid duplicated efforts and maintain a strong performance culture. As a result, a small number of individuals are impacted and are leaving the company,” a Freshworks spokesperson said.

The development came three months after Freshworks fired ‘less than 2%’ of its workforce amid an organisational reshuffle.

March 15 | Inc42 Exclusive: Home Decor Unicorn LivSpace Fires 100 Employees Citing Restructuring

Home renovation and interiors platform Livspace fired 100 employees, or 2% of its workforce, as part of a cost-cutting exercise, sources told Inc42. Product, engineering, content, and marketing teams were the most impacted by the layoffs, a source added.

“Our focus continues to be on the most efficient deployment of capital and resources to maximize value for our shareholders, customers, partners and employees,” the company said in a statement, adding, “in a company of our size, we will, in the normal course of our operations, redeploy resources. This is organic and a reflection of normal adjustments and/or performance management parameters.”

Without sharing details, LivSpace said it is extending an assistance package and healthcare coverage to the impacted employees. The startup has raised close to $430 Mn across funding rounds, entering the unicorn club in February 2022.

March 15 | Inc42 Exclusive: Retailtech Startup Dukaan Fires 30% Workforce Citing Restructuring

Retail tech startup Dukaan laid off around 56 employees, or around 30% of its workforce, sources told Inc42. The layoffs, due to a change in Dukaan’s focus to D2C brands from SMBs, affected inside sales team and account managers.

Dukaan offered a two-month salary as a severance package to the impacted employees. Suumit Shah, Dukaan’s founder and CEO, confirmed the development to Inc42.

Dukaan last raised $12.4 Mn in its pre-Series A round, led by 640 Oxford Ventures, in September 2021. In all, the retailtech startup has raised more than $18 Mn in funding across its seed and Pre-Series A round.

March 6 | upGrad Campus Lays Off 30% Workforce Amid Prolonged Funding Winter

Video learning platform upGrad Campus fired 30% of its total workforce, accounting for nearly 120 employees, Indian Express reported. It was unclear if the layoffs were targeted at a specific department within the startup.

Impartus, as upGrad Campus was known prior to its acquisition in March 2021, operates independently as an upGrad subsidiary. The layoffs at upGrad Campus are the second one at a subsidiary of the Ronnie Screwvala-led edtech unicorn.

In January, Harappa Education, which was acquired by upGrad in July 2022 for $38 Mn, fired 40% of the workforce or about 73 employees.

View Inc42 Layoff Tracker

March 2 | Inc42 Exclusive: Fitness Startup Fittr Fires 11% Workforce Citing Role Redundancy

Pune-based fitness startup Fittr laid off 11% of its workforce, or around 30 employees, across marketing, sales, client servicing and tech teams, sources told Inc42. The sources added that the company may have fired as many as 60 employees, though the claim remained unconfirmed.

In a statement given to Inc42, the cofounder and CEO of Fittr, Jitendra Chouksey, said the company had to let go of people due to role redundancy (11% of the total workforce in a span of 6-8 months). “Meanwhile, we did hire to backfill certain critical positions,” Chouksey added.

According to Fittr’s MCA filings, it slipped into losses in FY22. The startup registered a loss of INR 25.2 Cr in FY22 against a profit of INR 49.04 Lakh in FY21, even though its revenue from operations rose to INR 83.05 Cr in FY22 from INR 52.7 Cr in FY21.

March 1 | Conversational AI Startup Yellow.ai Lays Off 15% Employees Amid Funding Winter

Conversational AI startup Yellow.ai has fired 15% of its employees since August, on account of slow growth and a bloated workforce. According to media reports, the SaaS startup has carried out two layoffs between August 2022 and February 2023.

The startup has 1,063 employees, according to its LinkedIn profile. Confirming the development to Inc42, a Yellow.ai spokesperson said, “We had to reorganise some of the teams to double down on high-priority, high-growth areas, which in turn has affected 15% of the company.” The spokesperson added that the company is supporting the outgoing employees, without sharing details of any severance packages.

The layoffs come just months after Yellow.ai announced a $43 Mn ESOP plan for its employees. The startup has raised more than $102 Mn across funding rounds so far, with the latest round coming in August 2021 when Yellow.ai raised $78.15 Mn from the likes of WestBridge Capital, Sapphire Ventures and Salesforce Ventures.

February 22 | Edtech Startup Camp K12 Fires 70% Employees

Edtech startup Camp K12 reportedly fired 70% of its workforce without paying any dues to the impacted employees. While Inc42 could not reach Camp K12, media reports suggest that it might have laid off as many as 300 employees, of the 433 it had, according to its LinkedIn account.

According to media reports, the coding edtech startup has not paid salaries to its employees since December 2022; the layoffs took place in January 2023. The company has allegedly not paid any salaries to the impacted employees and it is not letting the remaining employees resign either.

Another edtech startup on the verge of capitulation, Camp K12 has raised $16 Mn in funding across two rounds, with the startup last raising $12 Mn in August 2021.

February 21 | Crypto Startup Polygon Fires 20% Staff As Crypto Winter Extends

Ethereum Layer-2 scaling startup Polygon laid off around 20% of its workforce, or 100 employees, as part of a restructuring exercise amid the ongoing crypto winter. The startup has fired employees across multiple business functions.

“Earlier this year, we consolidated multiple business units under Polygon Labs. As part of this process, we’re sharing the difficult news that we’ve reduced our team by 20% impacting multiple teams and about 100 positions,” the startup said in a blog post.

Polygon said that the employees impacted will receive a three months’ pay as severance, regardless of their level or tenure. The layoffs come a year after Polygon raised $450 Mn in a funding round, led by Sequoia India

February 20 | Security Management Startup MyGate Fires 30% Staff Amid Funding Crunch

Community and security management startup MyGate has reportedly laid off 30% of its employees across mid-management and junior roles. The startup’s total headcount was reduced from 600 pre-layoffs to 400.

Only a few laid off employees were offered a salary of two months as a severance package, while others did not receive severance at all, according to media reports.

Founded in 2016, MyGate offers security solutions for apartment complexes at entry and exit gates, along with other security systems such as RFID cards, biometrics and vehicle stickers. It has raised $79.5 Mn in VC funding to date.

February 14 | Inc42 Exclusive: Healthtech Platform Phablecare Faces Capitulation, Fires 350 Employees

In another startup capitulation story amid the harsh funding winter, healthtech platform Phablecare has fired 350 employees, nearly 50% of its workforce. The startup is currently facing a funding crisis and has held back the salaries of employees.

While sources told Inc42 that Phablecare has laid off around 350-400 employees so far, hundreds voluntarily resigned due to the delays in getting their salaries. The founders are yet to revert to a detailed questionnaire sent by Inc42.

In the meanwhile, the founders communicated to the staff as late as January that they were trying to raise funds. Phablecare’s situation is still developing as its day-to-day operations have taken a beating.

February 14 | Prime Venture-Backed HackerEarth Fires 9% Employees, Introduce Pay Cuts

Tech-focused skilling and hiring startup HackerEarth laid off nearly 9% of its employees working in different verticals, according to media reports. The number of employees impacted was around 17 of a total headcount of 190.

Sachin Gupta, CEO of HackerEarth, said, “2020 and 2021 were years of strong growth for us. We built a team in anticipation of this trend continuing. Instead, the second half of 2022 saw a slowdown in hiring, which resulted in lower growth in our business than what we had prepared ourselves for.”

HackerEarth has provided a severance package including eight weeks of pay to impacted employees. While employees with more than two years of stint in the company have been given one additional week of pay for every year of their service.

February 6 | FilterCopy Parent Pocket Aces Fires 25% Staff To Cut Costs

Digital entertainment startup Pocket Aces, which owns YouTube channels such as FilterCopy and Dice Media, fired a quarter of its workforce, or about 25 employees. The job cuts impacted employees in content, production and post-production teams.

Aditi Shrivastava, cofounder and CEO of Pocket Aces, told Inc42, “It has been a tough decision to part with some of our talented team members and friends. However, we must keep innovating our operating models, and this is the right thing to do in order to ensure that we remain agile with the changing audience preferences. We deeply care about the people leaving us and will provide them with financial support, and ongoing health insurance coverage and help them with their transition.”

The company further added that it would keep engaging with some of the outgoing employees on a freelance basis.

February 3 | Inc42 Exclusive: SaaS Logistics Startup FarEye Fires 90 Employees In Layoffs Round Two

Microsoft-backed SaaS logistics startup FarEye laid off 90 employees in a second round of layoffs in just eight months. The startup has fired 340 employees or around 45% of its workforce before the first layoffs. The job cuts impacted people across tech, product, HRBP and sales, sources told Inc42.

Confirming the layoffs, FarEye cofounder and CEO Kushal Nahata told Inc42 in a statement, “The reduction in staff was necessary to align business strategy with market demand and continue to serve our customers’ business needs, as has always been our mission. Our focus on product innovation and customer solutions remains strong, and we will continue to expand our reach in new industries and markets around the globe.”

While the startup did not go into the specifics, it said it has offered severance packages to the impacted employees as per the local laws.

January 27 | Ecommerce Unicorn DealShare Fires 100 Employees To Cut Costs

Tiger Global-backed grocery delivery unicorn DealShare fired 100 employees or about 7% of its 1,500-strong workforce in a bid to reduce monthly burn rate. The move impacted employees across all teams, according to the unicorn’s founder Sourjyendu Medda.

“We have removed the roles as a result of the current market conditions. We look at the business plan for the year and we have reduced the focus on some of the areas which would need very long-term capital infusion before becoming totally profitable,” said Medda, confirming the development to Inc42.

The grocery delivery unicorn did not specify the details of the severance benefits the outgoing employees would be entitled to.

January 25 | Inc42 Exclusive: SaaS Startup SirionLabs Fires 130 Employees Days After Raising $25 Mn

Sequoia and Tiger Global-backed SaaS startup SirionLabs fired around 15% of its total workforce, or about 130 employees, days after announcing a Series D fundraise of $25 Mn, Inc42 exclusively reported. Employees in DevOps, analysts, and support teams were impacted by the layoffs.

In a mail sent to the employees, Ajay Agrawal, the founder and CEO of the contract management startup, informed the employees about the decision. Inc42 has reviewed the mail sent to the employees by Agrawal. In the mail, Agrawal said that the startup has to shift its business strategy towards profitability due to the current macroeconomic environment, and this will result in downsizing.  

SirionLabs offered a salary of two months as a severance package to the impacted employees.

January 24 | Inc42 Exclusive: Healthtech Unicorn Innovaccer Goes For Second Layoff Round, Fires 245 Employees

Tiger Global-backed healthtech unicorn Innovaccer fired around 15% of its workforce, or 245 employees, in the second round of sackings at the unicorn within four months. The layoffs impacted teams in India and the US across multiple departments, Inc42 exclusively reported.

Confirming the development with Inc42, the unicorn’s cofounder and CEO Abhinav Shashank cited an ‘uncertain macroeconomic environment’ as the reason for the second round of layoffs. The cofounder said that Innovaccer will deprioritise certain areas that distract the unicorn from its “core portfolio”.

The startup will offer severance packages to the impacted employees along with transitional health insurance benefits, and job placement support, an Innovaccer spokesperson told Inc42. The round of layoffs also comes after the unicorn fired 90 employees in September 2022.

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January 23 | India’s First Unicorn InMobi Fires 50-70 Employees After Performance Review

InMobi, India’s first-ever unicorn, fired around 50-70 employees or about 3% of its workforce after it concluded a performance review, Business Standard reported. The impacted employees are both from InMobi and its mobile advertising platform Glance.

“InMobi/Glance is in the market actively hiring talent for the ambitious plans that we have. We also evaluate the performance of our existing talent on an annual basis and make decisions based on it. This is business as usual for us and part of our annual process. This year is no different,” the adtech company was cited as saying.

The company also announced that it will skip increments for CY23 and also undertake recruitment only when required.

January 20 | Inc42 Exclusive: MediBuddy Fires 200 Employees After Restructuring

Lightrock India-backed healthtech startup MediBuddy fired around 200 employees after conducting a restructuring exercise. The tech, product, sales and operations teams were the worst impacted because of the sudden layoffs, sources told Inc42.

“While layoffs are never easy and it is painful in the short term, this was to realign our current business goals for long-term stability and growth. In this entire process of realignment, we had to part with 8% of the workforce across all departments as a one-time restructuring exercise and eliminate any redundancy in roles and responsibilities,” MediBuddy said in a written statement.

MediBuddy said it would provide outplacement assistance to the impacted employees. Further, it has designed a care package that includes MediBuddy wallet continuity and extended health coverage.

January 20 | Swiggy Lays Off 380 Employees Citing Restructuring To Cut Costs

Food delivery major Swiggy fired 380 employees as part of a restructuring exercise to cut costs, founder and CEO Sriharsha Majety said in an email to the employees on January 20. The layoffs impacted around 5% of Swiggy’s workforce.

“While we’d already initiated actions on other indirect costs like infrastructure, office/facilities, etc, we needed to right-size our overall personnel costs also in line with the projections for the future,” added the CEO. The layoffs come after Swiggy reported a 2.2X growth in its losses, which reached INR 3,628.9 Cr in FY 22 compared to INR 1,616.9 Cr in FY21.

Swiggy is offering several benefits to the outgoing employees, including a payout worth at least three months of salary, including all the bonuses and incentives. Employees can also avail of the payout equivalent to their notice period, plus 15 days ex-gratia for every completed year of service.

January 19 | Hubilo Goes For A Second Layoff, Fires 115 Employees 

Event management startup Hubilo laid off 115 employees or around 35% of its workforce in a restructuring exercise.

In a written statement, the startup said, “Hubilo has made the difficult decision to restructure the company amid global macroeconomic conditions. Approximately 35% of the company was laid off as a result. We have made our best effort to ensure that the impacted employees are supported with generous severance packages as well as outplacement services to give them a smooth transition.”

Hubilo fired employees for the second time in six months after it fired around 45-50 employees in July 2022.

January 17 | Inc42 Exclusive: Exotel Lays Off 80 Employees

Bengaluru-based cloud telephony platform Exotel laid off 142 employees, or 15% of its workforce, citing their poor performance, sources told Inc42.

The layoffs took place following a revision in the startup’s performance improvement plan (PIP) policy in November 2022, under which Exotel removed the clause of giving two warnings to employees for below par performance.

However, a company spokesperson told Inc42 in a statement that 80 employees were impacted due to the revision in PIP policy and business restructuring.

An Exotel spokesperson, without confirming or denying the number of employees sacked, attributed the recent layoff exercise at the startup to restructuring and mid-year review. 

“Recently, some members of our team have been affected due to our restructuring efforts (3%) & the mid-year review, business as usual performance improvement planning process (less than 5%),” the spokesperson said.

January 17 | Auto After-Sales Service Platform GoMechanic Fires 70% Employees

Automobile after-sales service startup GoMechanic sacked nearly 70% of its workforce, which amounted to nearly 500 employees being fired. 

While Inc42 could not immediately verify the details, media reports noted that the startup’s backer Sequoia has launched a forensic audit of its finances amid allegations of financial irregularities at the startup. The startup is said to have a total loans of INR 120 Cr and ‘market pendency’ of INR 40 Cr.

The Gurugram-based startup needs to raise funds in the ‘next few months, sources familiar with the development added, as the startup does not have any runway beyond that.

January 16 | Quick Commerce Soonicorn Dunzo Fires 3% Workforce After Shutting Dark Stores

Reliance-backed quick commerce startup Dunzo laid off nearly 3% of its workforce, having shut down a few dark stores a few months ago. While the startup did not clarify how many employees left the organisation, media reports reported a number between 60 and 80.

“Whatever the numbers, these are people who chose to build their careers with Dunzo, and it is sad to have talented colleagues leave us. We are extending the best support possible to help them during this transition,” Dunzo CEO and cofounder Kabeer Biswas said in a statement.

As with the number of employees fired, Dunzo did not clarify the severance packages given to the impacted employeer, nor the departments the employees were fired from.

January 16 | Foodtech Unicorn Rebel Foods Fires 50 Employees Citing Performance Review

Foodtech unicorn Rebel Foods fired 50 employees, or about 2% of its workforce, citing an annual performance review at the startup. The startup did not provide details on the departments the employees were fired from or the sewerage benefits the said employees would be entitled to, if any.

“Any news heard is on account of annual performance evaluation and realigning the organisation to our priorities for future goals. The impacted number is less than 2% of our organisational strength,” a Rebel Foods spokesperson said.

The layoffs come after the startup‘s net loss widened 55% YoY to INR 564.4 Cr in FY22 from INR 364 Cr in FY21, while its revenue also doubled to INR 907 Cr from INR 436.5 Cr in FY21.

January 16 | ShareChat, Moj Parent Mohalla Tech Fires 500 Employees 

Mohalla Tech Pvt Ltd, the parent company of content platforms Sharechat and Moj fired 500 employees or about 20% of its workforce. It was not immediately clear which departments were impacted by the layoffs.

In a statement, a Sharechat and Moj spokesperson said, “We’ve had to take some of the most difficult and painful decisions in our history as a company and had to let go of around 20% of our incredibly talented employees who have been with us in this startup journey.”

The impacted employees will be receiving the entire salary of their notice periods, two-weeks’ pay for each year served with the company and 100% of the variable pay till December 2022. Also, the company will allow impacted employees to encash unused leave balance of up to 45 days, while also allowing them to keep their office assets, such as laptops.

January 13 | Inc42 Exclusive: SaaS Start Skit.ai Fires 115 Employees Citing Restructuring

Bengaluru-based SaaS voice automation startup Skit.ai laid off around 115 employees citing restructuring at the firm, sources told Inc42. The sources added that the number could be as high as 130. The layoffs were announced by Skit.ai CEO and cofounder Sourabh Gupta during a town hall meeting. 

The startup has fired employees across business analyst, software engineering, product, operations, SPM and CSM roles, the sources said. Most of the laid off employees are from the India team as the startup shifts its focus to the US market, according to Inc42 sources.

The startup has offered two months of salary as a severance package to the laid off employees and will extend their insurance coverage for the next six months, while also allowing employees to keep their assets such as laptops and iPads, documents reviewed by Inc42 showed.

January 12 | Crypto Unicorn CoinDCX Fires Employees As Part Of Restructuring Drive

Crypto unicorn CoinDCX fired some employees as part of a restructuring drive at the cryptocurrency exchange, a source close to the development told Inc42. 

While the number was not immediately verifiable, media reports suggest that the crypto exchange has fired around 50 people from the sales and marketing teams at the company, or around 8% of its total workforce. The impacted employees have reportedly been given a month’s severance pay and let go after serving their notice periods. 

The layoffs come as a prolonged crypto winter and the recent collapses of FTX and Terra Luna have shaken the public confidence in crypto as an asset class in India.

View Inc42 Layoff Tracker

January 12 | Payments Soonicorn Cashfree Sacks 80 Employees Citing Organisational Reshuffle

Fintech platform Cashfree Payments sacked 80 employees – as many as 13% of its workforce – across several teams as part of an organisational restructuring, sources told Inc42. The fintech soonicorn could have fired as many as 120 people, but that could not be verified.

However, the company claimed that only 6-8% of the employees were affected by the retrenchment. The details of any severance packages or any other benefits that the outgoing employees would have been entitled to were not clear either.

“The organisation has reevaluated the relevance of certain roles and functions leading to movement of talent within teams and a few employee exits. This process of organisational restructuring has impacted around 6-8% of employees,” said a Cashfree spokesperson.

January 12 | Ola Fires 200 Employees Citing Restructuring

Mobility startup Ola fired 200 employees across verticals, citing an organisational restructuring. The laid off employees are from Ola Cabs, Ola Electric, and Ola Financial Services verticals, sources told Inc42.

Confirming the development, a Ola spokesperson told Inc42 in a statement, “We regularly conduct restructuring exercises to improve efficiencies, and there are roles which are now redundant. We will continue making new hires in engineering and design including senior talent in our key priority areas.”

The company offered severance packages as per their respective notice periods, they said, adding that the layoffs began earlier this week. 

January 10 | LEAD Fires Another 60 Employees, Takes Total Layoffs To 100

Mumbai-based edtech startup LEAD laid off around 60 employees, mostly from the tech and product teams. However, the startup told Inc42 that it was a regular churn due to business activities.

In a statement shared with Inc42, LEAD said, “We have grown 2X this year and are hiring for growth. If projects don’t meet success criteria or don’t fit our strategic roadmap, teams are either re-assigned or asked to seek other opportunities. This is a regular business activity and a normal churn of 1-2 % in an organisation of 2,000 people.”

The layoffs came shortly after LEAD raised INR 35 Cr in debt from Alteria Capital, and shortly after the layoffs, the startup raised INR 160 Cr. 

January 10 | Unacademy-Owned Relevel Fires 40 Employees As Company Pivots

Unacademy-owned Relevel plans to lay off 40 employees or nearly 20% of its workforce. In an internal mail sent to employees, Unacademy CEO and cofounder Gaurav Munjal cited Relevel’s pivot from core education business to test product business and focus on the newly launched NextLevel app as the reason for the layoffs.

“Almost 80% of Relevel’s remaining team will be absorbed by other businesses of Unacademy Group and we will have to let go of around 20% (around 40 people) of the team because of lack of availability of roles for them,” Munjal said in the mail. 

The impacted employees would be provided with severance pay equal to the notice period and an additional two months. Besides, the company also said that the laid off workers would also get accelerated vesting, medical insurance and placement support.

January 6 | Bike Rental & EV Startup Bounce Fires 3-4% Of Staff Citing Restructuring

Bike rental and electric vehicle (EV) startup Bounce laid off around 3-4% of its total workforce as part of an ongoing ‘restructuring drive’. The layoffs largely affected customer service and other segments, Bounce said.

A company spokesperson told Inc42 that the employees were “let go off” phase wise and the exercise largely affected the non-original equipment manufacturer (OEM) vertical. As per the company, the layoffs largely affected customer service and other segments.

It is prudent to mention that media reports have mentioned a much higher number, to the tune of almost 250 employees being fired. The startup, however, has denied the claims.

January 5 | Ecommerce Rollup UpScalio Fires 15% Of Staff Citing Performance Review

UpScalio became the first Thrasio-style startup in the country to lay off employees, as it fired around 15% of its staff citing a performance review.

In a statement shared with Inc42, Ankur Singh, head of people and culture at UpScalio, said, “While UpScalio has been able to grow aggressively, we always keep a keen eye on profitability. As part of our standard annual employee appraisal process, in December, we have let go of 15% of our staff.”

The layoffs come nine months after the ecommerce rollup startup raised $15 Mn in its pre-Series B funding round in March 2022. UpScalio has raised around $60 Mn from investors across funding rounds.

January 5 | B2B Marketplace Moglix Fires 40 Employees Citing Automation

B2B industrial goods marketplace Moglix fired 40 employees – around 6% of its total workforce – citing process automation and performance reviews. While other media reports mentioned the number could be as high as 200, Inc42 could not independently verify the same.

“We have hired 700+ people this year and continue to expand with a target to hire 300+ people for 2023. We keep a watch out for low performers and continue to automate tasks, for which annually 2-3% of people can be impacted,” said Moglix in a statement.

Moglix posted a loss of INR $21.03 Mn in FY22, up 88.1% from $11.18 Mn in FY21. At the same time, its revenue rose 192% to $306.9 Mn from $105.2 Mn in FY21.

January 4 | upGrad-Owned Harappa Education Fires 40% Of Workforce After Business Model Change

upGrad-owned edtech startup Harappa Education fired around 73 employees – about 40% of its workforce – in the first layoff of 2023. The startup laid off employees from content, design, product, and marketing teams, sources told Inc42.

Harappa might just see more layoffs this month, as sources told Inc42 that more employees are likely to lose their jobs in the coming days. “This is the first phase of layoffs and there could be more. It seems that two lists were made – one for December and the other for January. Hence, in January more layoffs are expected,” the sources told Inc42.

Harappa Education was acquired by edtech unicorn upGrad for $38 Mn (INR 300 Cr) in July 2022. Last September, upGrad announced plans to invest $40 Mn (INR 320 Cr) in Harappa Education to drive the edtech’s growth.

December 26 | PayU India Fires 150 Employees After Org Reshuffle

PayU India, the payments and fintech unit Prosus, laid off around 6% of its workforce or around 150 employees citing an organisational reshuffle in India. The layoffs mainly affected PayU India’s digital payment security and mobile payment technology unit Wibmo, which it acquired for $70 Mn in 2019.

“Keeping in mind our highest strategic priorities, we are realigning teams across some of [our] businesses in India. As a result of which, regretfully we will to have part ways with some of our colleagues,” a PayU spokesperson told Inc42.

The layoffs at PayU happened despite the fintech achieving profitability in FY22. The startup’s FY22 results showed a profit of INR 126 Cr against revenue of INR 2,130.3 Cr.

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December 16 | Listed SaaS Unicorn Freshworks Fires 90 Employees Citing Org Rejig

Nasdaq-listed enterprisetech major Freshworks fired around 90 employees as part of an organisational reshuffle, or about 2% of its total workforce. The employees were fired across sales, marketing, and engineering verticals.

“We shifted some existing roles in product, marketing and sales to support more critical initiatives and reduced the need for a small number of others – less than 2% of our workforce. Freshworks did not do a company-wide layoff,” said a Freshworks spokesperson. The company paid severance packages and other settlements to the impacted employees.

In the third quarter of FY22, Freshworks reported consolidated revenue of $128.8 Mn, up 37% YoY. During the same period, the company narrowed its losses to $58.3 Mn from $107.4 Mn during the year-ago period.

December 8 | Swiggy Lays Off 250+ Employees Citing Performance Review

Foodtech unicorn Swiggy joined its competitor Zomato in having fired employees in 2022, with news coming that it may lay off 250+ employees or around 3% of its total workforce after a performance review.

“We concluded our performance cycle in October and have announced ratings and promotions at all levels. As with every cycle, we expect exits based on performance,” a Swiggy spokesperson told Inc42. The layoffs come off the back of Jefferies reporting that Swiggy’s losses during H1 FY23 were six times higher than Zomato’s standalone losses during the same time. 

Swiggy’s losses in the first half of FY23 were at around $315 Mn (INR 2,570 Cr), while Zomato’s standalone loss during the period remained around the $50 Mn (INR 410 Cr) mark.

December 7 | Vedantu Fires Another 385 Employees, Takes Total Layoffs To 1,109

Edtech unicorn Vedantu fired employees for the fourth time this month, laying off 385 people to take the total count to 1,109. The layoffs have impacted people from sales, HR and content teams.

The latest layoff comes around a month after the unicorn acquired a majority stake in Karnataka-based test prep platform Deeksha for $40 Mn. Internal sources told Inc42 that the startup was left with around 18 months of runway, prompting the decision to let go of employees again. Vedantu is left with 3,300 employees after the latest firings.

Vedantu is offering a salary of two months as a severance package and has extended the medical coverage for the fired employees till March 31, 2023, according to Inc42 sources.

December 3 | Inc42 Exclusive: Healthtech Startup HealthifyMe Fires 150 Employees Citing Global Recession Fears

Health and fitness startup HealthifyMe fired 150 employees, or about 15-20% of its total workforce, citing slow growth triggered by the fears of a global recession. Employees in SME (subject matter expert), quality analytics, product and marketing roles were impacted by the layoffs.

“We have had to take the tough decision to let go 150 of our team members. Like much of tech, growth hasn’t kept pace with expectations and hiring,” the startup said in a written statement. HealthifyMe will be offering a two-month severance package and will further extend medical coverage to the impacted employees.

The layoffs come a year and a half after the startup raised $75 Mn in a Series C round of funding, having raised $100 Mn to date.

December 3 | Inc42 Exclusive: Traveltech Major OYO Fires 600 Employees Across Multiple Teams

IPO-bound hospitality chain OYO fired 600 employees from tech roles in product and engineering teams. The layoffs come after OYO decided to merge the two teams.

“The downsizing in tech is also happening in teams which were developing pilots and proof of concepts such as in-app gaming, social content curation and patron-facilitated content,” said OYO in a statement. However, the hospitality chain did not provide any details of the benefits the outgoing employees would be entitled to.

Ritesh Agrawal, founder and CEO of OYO, added, “We will be doing all that we can to ensure that most of the people we are having to let go, are gainfully employed.” The layoffs come after OYO posted an adjusted EBITDA of INR 56 Cr in Q2FY23, its second consecutive EBITDA-positive quarter.

December 2 | Inc42 Exclusive: ShareChat Parent Shuts Down Fantasy Cricket Subsidiary Jeet11, Fires 100 Employees

Mohalla Tech Private Ltd, the parent company of ShareChat, has shut down its fantasy gaming platform Jeet11, sources aware of the development told Inc42. Mohalla Tech has also fired 100 employees, mostly from non-tech roles within Jeet11.

The shutdown comes two years after the ShareChat and Moj parent forayed into fantasy sport. “We can confirm that we are ceasing operations of Jeet11 and have reorganized some of our functions, which meant movement of this talent within teams and a few employee exits,” Mohalla Tech said, confirming the development.

The layoffs also come almost 19 months after the startup raised $502 Mn in its Series E round, becoming the first social media unicorn in the process.

November 30 | Inc42 Exclusive: Edtech Startup Teachmint Fires 45 Employees Citing Restructuring

Joining the contingent of edtech startup firing employees, Teachmint laid off 45 employees or about 5% of its workforce citing restructuring. Inc42 exclusively reported that the layoffs were conducted across sales and operations teams.

“The impacted employees have been informed in advance and we are supporting them to the maximum extent possible,” Teachmint said in a statement given to Inc42, confirming the development.

The layoffs came almost a year after the edtech startup raised $78 Mn in a Series B round led by new investors Rocketship.vc and Vulcan Capital. Teachmint has raised $118 Mn in total to date.

November 29 | Hiring Platform Hirect Fires 200 Employees Citing Restructuring

Bengaluru and US-based hiring platform Hirect fired 40% of its workforce, or 200 employees, citing an organisational restructuring and a change in its business model.

The layoffs triggered several social media posts from employees that were fired, alleging high spending on social media influencers, non-payment of PF contributions and dues, and non-receipt of relieving letters. Others reported that the startup did not provide any severance package or job search assistance as well.

According to Crunchbase, Hirect has raised nearly $15 Mn across several rounds. Incidentally, the startup was reported to have raised $14.6 Mn in its Series A just two days after conducting layoffs.

November 28 | VerSe Lays Off 150 Employees After Raising $805 Mn In April

The parent company of DailyHunt and Josh, VerSe Innovation, laid off 150 employees, or about 5% of its workforce of 3,000 before the layoffs. The startup also decided to undertake an 11% pay cut for employees with annual salaries of more than INR 10 Lakh, according to Inc42 sources.

According to Inc42 sources, most of the layoffs happened from the short video platform, Josh. The layoffs at VerSe come just a few months after it raised $805 Mn at a valuation of $5 Bn in April this year. Incidentally, the startup did not share details of the benefits the outgoing employees would receive.

The startup’s expenses surged 2.35X to INR 3,714 Cr in FY22 from INR 1,580 Cr in FY21, while revenue from operations increased only about 45% to INR 965 Cr in FY22.

November 19 | Zomato Fires At Least 100 Employees In Performance-Related Layoffs

Listed foodtech startup Zomato became the first in its segment to fire employees amid a global economic downturn, laying off 3-4% of its workforce. In response to Inc42’s queries, a Zomato spokesperson said, “There has been a regular performance-based churn of under 3% of our workforce; there’s nothing more to it.”

Over the last few weeks, Zomato has seen several high-profile exits, including cofounder Mohit Gupta. Further, Kuwait-based startup Talabat, who bought Zomato’s UAE food delivery business in 2019, shut down Zomato’s food delivery business there.

The foodtech unicorn narrowed its loss to INR 250.8 Cr in Q2 FY23 YoY.

View Inc42 Layoff Tracker

November 9 | B2B Insurtech Plum Fires 10% Employees Citing Restructuring

Tiger Global-backed B2B insurtech player Plum fired 10% of its workforce, or about 36 employees, as part of a cost-cutting exercise. The startup said it conducted multiple cost-cutting measures before going for layoffs.

Plum’s CEO and founder Abhishek Poddar added that the impacted employees will receive severance pay, healthcare benefits, well-being counselling, ESOP vesting and placement and career support.

Notably, the layoffs came after Poddar had said Plum would increase its employee count to 1,000 by FY23. The startup’s last funding round was its Series A round worth $15.6 Mn, which saw Tiger Global participate. In all, the startup has raised $20.6 Mn.

November 7 | Unacademy Goes For Third Layoff Round, Fires 10% Employees

Edtech unicorn Unacadamy conducted its third round of layoffs citing “unprecedented times”, as communicated to the employees in an internal email. The third round of layoffs impacted 10% of its workforce, taking the total number of employees fired by Unacademy to 1500 for the year.

The layoffs come after the edtech major had said it would not conduct further layoffs during the earlier round. However, Unacademy’s losses almost doubled year-on-year (YoY) to INR 2,848 Cr in FY22. At the same time, the startup reported consolidated revenue of INR 719 Cr in FY22.

Unacademy said that the affected employees will receive severance pay equivalent to the notice period and an additional two months. Munjal also said that the affected employees will get medical insurance coverage for an additional year and a supposed ‘dedicated’ placement support.

November 7 | Edtech Startup Practically Lays Off Employees, Cuts Down Headcount By 190 In Three Months

Hyderabad-based K-12 STEM edtech startup Practically conducted a layoff in November, firing an unconfirmed number of employees. The edtech startup has gradually reduced its headcount by 190 employees since August 2022, according to Practically’s COO and cofounder Charu Noheria.

The layoffs at Practically come a year and a half after it raised $4 Mn in January 2021, after which it could not secure funding, resulting in the layoffs. Noheria told Inc42 that Practically’s last funding round worth $5 Mn could not materialise as investors backed out. The COO noted that the current investors have helped stabilise the startup.

November 4 | B2B Ecommerce Unicorn Udaan Fires 350 In Second Layoffs This Year

B2B ecommerce unicorn Udaan fired 350 employees, stating its move to turn profitable and “achieve efficiency”. The move comes less than five months after the ecommerce unicorn fired 180 people to cut costs, which Inc42 exclusively reported.

“As we move forward in our journey towards making Udaan a profitable company, the efficiency enhancement drive and the evolution in business model has created some redundancies in the system, with some roles no longer required,” an Udaan spokesperson told Inc42.

The layoffs at Udaan happened a week after it raised $120 Mn in debt, having raised $250 Mn in debt in January this year as well.

November 2 | SaaS Unicorn Chargebee Lays Off 10% Employees Citing Macroeconomic Conditions

Chennai-based SaaS unicorn Chargebee fired 10% of its staff citing macroeconomic conditions and a need to cut costs going forward. The development was confirmed in a LinkedIn post shared by the cofounder Kris Subramanian. The move impacted 142 employees across departments.

Chargebee said that the employees impacted will receive three months’ pay, three months of extended medical benefits and outplacement service. “This difficult decision was driven by external market forces as well as our need to address the operational debt we have accumulated in the last few years,” said Subramanian.

The layoffs come nine months after Chargebee raised $250 Mn in a funding round and nine months after it acquired collections management platform numberz.

October 12 | FrontRow Fires 125-130 Employees, Takes Layoff Total To 275

After having laid off 145 employees in May, edtech startup FrontRow laid off another 125-130 employees. With the latest layoffs, the edtech startup has laid off as much as 85% of its total workforce in less than six months.

FrontRow founder Ishaan Preet Singh said, “Unfortunately, as we realized that a sales and marketing-led approach to this market didn’t work with our current delivery model, we had to let go a large part of our team.” Singh added that the laid-off employees would receive a month’s salary as severance.

The layoffs come almost a year after the startup raised $14 Mn in its Series A funding round. FrontRow is backed by Deepika Padukone’s Family Office, Vishal Dadlani, rapper Raftaar, CRED’s Kunal Shah, Unacademy’s Gaurav Munjal and ShareChat’s Farid Ahsan.

October 12 | BYJU’S Lays Off 2,500 Employees After Notching Up INR 4,588 Cr In Losses

India’s most valuable startup BYJU’S laid off 2,500 employees from its workforce, citing its push to achieve profitability by the end of FY23. The decacorn laid off employees across product, content, media, and technology teams.

The edtech giant has also restructured its business, consolidating its K-10 acquired businesses such as Toppr, Meritnation, TutorVista, HashLearn, and Scholar into one unit, while Great Learning and Aakash would operate independently.

The move comes seven months after BYJU’S announced raising $800 Mn in a funding round and just weeks after it published its financial report for FY21. The edtech major clocked up INR 4,588 Cr in losses, almost 20X higher compared to FY20.

October 3 | WazirX Lays Off 60+ Employees Amid Crypto Winter

Indian cryptocurrency exchange WazirX laid off around 40% of its workforce, or at least 60 people, citing adverse economic conditions. The startup laid off across customer support, HR and other teams. WazirX has also relieved the entire public policy and communication team of its duties.

The laid-off employees would receive severance pay for 45 days and would not be required to report for work effective immediately. The reduced trade volumes across crypto exchanges in India prompted the startup to conduct layoffs.

The layoffs came when WazirX is facing heat from Indian authorities such as the ED on allegations of money laundering and tax evasion. Further, it was recently embroiled in a public spat with Binance after the Chinese crypto exchange denied acquiring WazirX.

September 19 | Dukaan Lays Off 23 Employees Citing Restructuring And Automation

Dukaan tech startup Dukaan laid off 23 employees citing restructuring and automation. Cofounder and CEO Suumit Shah announced the layoffs in a Twitter thread on September 19. Dukaan laid off employees in live chat support, call support and on the tech front after those processes were automated.

“Since we shifted our whole focus from the small kirana/SMB segment to enterprises/D2C brands, there wasn’t much of a role for live chat support or call support, and on the tech front, we automated a lot of stuff,” said the cofounder in a tweet.

The move comes more than a year after Dukaan raised $11 Mn in Series A; the enterprisetech startup has raised $17 Mn in funding so far.

September 19 | Ola Lays Off 200 Software Engineers As Part Of Its Restructuring Plan

Mobility giant Ola laid off 200 software engineers as part of its mega restructuring plan in a bid to centralise its operations and reduce redundancies. The startup had over 2,000 engineering roles across verticals, with 10% of them let go during the layoffs.

The unicorn has also hinted at hiring 3,000 more engineers in the coming months as part of its restructuring plan. The layoffs come after unconfirmed reports suggested the unicorn laid off as many as 2,100 off-role employees a few months ago.

Over the past few months, Ola has shut down various verticals in a bid to streamline its operations, including the used cars marketplace Ola Cars, the quick commerce vertical Ola Dash and its car-leasing service to drivers on Ola.

September 16 | Inc42 Exclusive: Clear Lays Off Around 200 Employees Citing Restructuring

SaaS startup Clear (formerly Cleartax) laid off 190-200 employees or about 20% of its total workforce. The startup cited restructuring to extend the runway as a reason for conducting layoffs across teams. According to Inc42 sources, the number of employees laid off could get higher.

The layoffs come after Clear made two acquisitions this year, compliance application CimplyFive and supply chain financing application Xpedize. The startup’s last funding round saw it raise $75 Mn in October 2021.

Clear reported a loss after tax of INR 118 Cr in FY21, 24% higher from INR 95 Cr in FY20. The startup reported an increase in both total income and total expenses during the said fiscal year.

September 7 | Inc42 Exclusive: Rupeek Lays Off 50 More Employees, Takes Total Count To 230

After laying off 180 employees exactly three months ago, fintech startup Rupeek laid off another 50 employees. The number let go amounted to around 5% of Rupeek’s workforce, said a spokesperson. The latest layoffs take the total number to 230, or around 20% of the startup’s original workforce.

Incidentally, these pink slips were issued just a day after Inc42 exclusively reported that Rupeek is in talks with investors to raise $16 Mn. So far, the fintech startup has raised $134 Mn, with its latest funding round back in January 2022.

Rupeek reported a loss of INR 156 Cr in FY21, down 68% from INR 487 Cr in FY20. At the same time, its total revenue grew to INR 88.5 Cr from INR 31.9 Cr in FY20.

September 1 | Inc42 Exclusive: Healthtech Unicorn Innovaccer Lays Off 120 Employees Amid ‘Adverse Economic Conditions’

Healthtech unicorn Innovaccer laid off 120 employees citing ‘adverse economic conditions’, with most of the employees being from the tech team. Many team managers have also been laid off, resulting in multiple projects shutting down.

According to Inc42 sources, Innovaccer offered a three-month salary as a severance package to the impacted employees. Innovaccer cofounder and CEO Abhinav Shashank confirmed the layoffs to Inc42.

The layoffs come nine months after Innovaccer doubled its valuation to $3.3 Bn after raising $150 Mn. In all, the healthtech unicorn has raised $375 Mn over its lifetime.

August 31 | Inc42 Exclusive: Microblogging Site Koo Lays Off Over 5% Workforce

Koo, the microblogging site being touted as India’s answer to Twitter, laid off 5% workforce. Most of the employees that were laid off were from the operations and backend teams.

The social media startup last raised funds in February 2022, when a dozen investors pumped $10 Mn into the startup. In all, Koo has raised $44.5 Mn so far.

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August 25 | Meesho Shuts Down Meesho Superstore Operations In 90% Cities, Lays Off 300+ Employees

Ecommerce unicorn Meesho shut down the majority of its Superstore business, according to Inc42 sources. This has resulted in around 300 people being laid off as Meesho rolled back Superstore to only two cities, after expanding to six states in a short amount of time.

Sources told Inc42 that Meesho offered two months of salary as a severance package to the employees. It has also absorbed some of the on-roll employees in its core business. According to Inc42 sources, low revenue and high cash burn prompted the ecommerce unicorn to roll back its e-grocery service.

The layoffs come after Meesho raised a whopping $570 Mn in 2021 alone, having raised $1.1 Bn since it was founded in 2015.

August 5 | Edtech LEAD Lays Off Around 100 People After Performance Appraisal

Edtech unicorn LEAD has laid off around 100 employees as part of a performance appraisal process. The employees that were laid off belonged to multiple departments at the edtech unicorn.

A LEAD spokesperson said that performance appraisals happen each year and cited the layoffs as part of the same process. While media reports seemed to suggest a number of around 100, LEAD stated that the number is less than 100, without sharing the exact number of employees let go.

The layoffs come almost eight months after LEAD became a unicorn after raising $100 Mn in a funding round.

August 2 | Vedantu Takes Its Layoff Tally To Over 724 Employees; Conducts Third Layoff Citing Restructuring

Edtech startup Vedantu laid off a combined 724 employees across three layoffs, giving internal restructuring as the primary reason. Incidentally, Vedantu got the unicorn tag last year after raising $100 Mn in funding

The edtech’s first layoff came on May 5, when Inc42 exclusively reported that the edtech startup laid off 200 employees. The edtech startup said that it will be hiring around 1,000 people in the coming months. However, Vedantu conducted another layoff on May 17, this time firing 424 employees.

The third layoff came on August 2; Inc42 exclusively reported that Vendantu laid off more than 100 of its employees citing restructuring. The edtech asked the employees to put in their papers between July 4 and July 9 this year.

July 20 | Inc42 Exclusive: BlueStacks Lays Off 60 Indian Employees Citing Restructuring

Android emulator platform BlueStacks laid off 60 of its Indian employees as part of a restructuring exercise within the company. The layoffs impacted employees in various departments in BlueStacks’ Delhi office.

Hue Harguindeguy, CHRO, BlueStacks confirmed the developments to Inc42, stating that owing to macroeconomic changes, the startup had to realign. Harguindeguy added that the startup is helping the employees that were let go find new jobs.

BlueStacks has offered a one-month salary as severance pay to the laid-off employees which also includes medical benefits, per Inc42 sources.

July 12 | Event Tech Startup Hubilo Lays Off 12% Employees Citing Restructuring

Event tech startup Hubilo laid off 12% of its workforce, or around 45-50 employees after it stated that it will shift its focus to live and hybrid events. The Bengaluru and San Francisco-based has laid off employees across several departments.

A Hubilo spokesperson told Inc42 that the layoffs are a strategy to boost business. “On July 7th, Hubilo let go of approximately 12% of its workforce to pursue a strategy that will allow it to lay the foundation for the future of virtual, live, and hybrid events. We greatly value the contributions of all our team members,” the spokesperson said. Hubilo claimed that it has offered compensation packages and benefits, including stock options, bonuses, laptop retention, and job placement assistance to laid-off employees.

The layoffs come nine months after the startup had raised $125 Mn in a funding round.

July 12 | Inc42 Exclusive: Fresh Fruit & Vegetable Delivery Startup Fraazo Lays Off Over 150 Employees

Mumbai-based fresh fruit and vegetable delivery startup Fraazo has laid off more than 150 employees amid a cash crunch, winding down operations in Delhi NCR entirely and shutting down 50 dark stores across the country in the process. The layoffs took place across operations, tech, product, procurement, HR store managers, and planning and growth teams, among others, to cut expenses amidst a fund crunch.

Inc42 sources also noted that the number would be much higher if we include off-role employees such as delivery drivers. The employees that will leave the startup will receive a month’s salary as a severance package, mostly based on notice periods of the said employees.

The layoffs come nine months after the startup raised $50 Mn in a Series B funding round. Fraazo is shutting down more dark stores in Bengaluru and Hyderabad, which will result in more layoffs, particularly for the off-role employees.

June 30 | Inc42 Exclusive: Edtech Startup Crejo.Fun Shuts Down, Leaving 170 Employees Without A Job

Bengaluru-based edtech startup Crejo.Fun became the second edtech startup to shut down in June alone after Udayy, after failing to raise funding and schools reopening. The company claims to have refunded all of the customers, while it works to sell the IP to return some capital to the investors.

The company had raised $3 Mn in pre-seed funding last year from Matrix Partners India and Flipkart cofounder Binny Bansal-backed venture capital firm 021 Capital. However, it had been more than 14 months since then and Crejo.Fun was under pressure to raise fresh funding. The company’s 170-strong workforce will receive salary for July and the company claims that almost 90% of the same have been placed elsewhere. 

Cofounder Vikas Bansal confirmed the development with Inc42, saying in a written statement that even though the company grew well even with schools reopening, it has decided to shut down operations. “However we were running out of funds and while we were trying to raise capital for the last couple of months, but given the fundraising environment, we were unable to raise funds,” Bansal added.

June 29 | Inc42 Exclusive: EV Mobility Startup Oye Rickshaw Lays Off 40 Employees

Gurugram-based EV mobility startup Oye Rickshaw laid off 40 employees amid increasing losses and declining business, becoming the first in its industry to do so. Employees from tech, sales, marketing and several on-ground executives have been laid off by the startup citing adverse market conditions.

Mohit Sharma, cofounder and CEO of Oye Rickshaw, in a statement, said, “As we head towards a market downturn, we have had to make some difficult decisions to ensure the company continues to stay stable and achieve our mission of redefining India’s EV ecosystem.” Sharma said that when market improves in the future, the startup would look to get some of the laid-off employees back on board.

After having raised INR 24 Cr in a debt round last year, Inc42 was also informed that Oye Rickshaw is raising another INR 40 Cr in debt for day-to-day operations and to buy more batteries for its battery-swapping business.

June 29 | BYJU’S-owned Toppr Lays Off 350+ Citing Restructuring

In another layoff at a BYJU’s-owned edtech company, Toppr has laid off around 350 employees citing company restructuring. Most of the impacted employees were subject matter experts, content developers, managers and heads of departments for various subjects, among others, according to Inc42 sources.

According to an email sent to laid-off employees accessed by Inc42, the company said that it conducted a restructuring and that left multiple roles redundant. Toppr will provide severance payment equivalent to the notice period of the laid-off employees, along with a package including 15 days’ salary for each year completed and prorata performance bonus (if applicable) till June 30.

A BYJU’s spokesperson told Inc42 that it has absorbed 80% of Toppr’s workforce, after having bought the edtech startup for $150 Mn last year. In FY21, Toppr incurred a loss of INR 125.9 Cr. It generated INR 52 Cr in revenue, of which INR 50.6 Cr came from operations. Its expense stood at INR 178 Cr during the same time.

June 28 | Nova Benefits Lays Off 70 Employees Citing Restructuring, Takes Total Layoffs To 80

Bengaluru-based employees wellness platform Nova Benefits has laid off 70 employees as a result of restructuring. Earlier this month, the startup had laid off 10 employees, and the current layoffs take the total employees impacted to 80, or about 40% of its total workforce. The employees were laid off from sales, accounts, marketing and creative teams, among others.

“We owe everyone at Nova a challenging, fast-paced growth path. However, in the face of our redefined business strategy, we cannot provide this to 30% of our teammates,” a mass mail accessed by Inc42 read. The startup also cited cost-cutting as a reason to lay people off and conduct a business restructuring.

The layoffs come four months after it raised an undisclosed amount from Naval Ravikant-backed AngelList Early-Stage Quant Fund. In September, last year, the startup had raised $10 Mn in its Series A which Inc42 had exclusively reported. The round back then was led by Susquehanna International Group (SIG) and Bessemer Venture Partners.

June 28 | Inc42 Exclusive: BYJU’s-owned WhiteHat Jr Lays Off 300 Citing Cost Cutting

After forcing around 1,000 employees to resign as it called them to work from office, BYJU’s-owned WhiteHat Jr has laid off around 300 employees to cut costs. The sales, marketing and operations teams were the affected teams, with the first two being the worst affected.

According to Inc42 sources, the management has cited business restructuring as the reason behind the layoffs. Another source informed Inc42 that the WhiteHat Jr is in process of firing more people, and the number of employees impacted could double to reach 600 by the end of it. The company is said to have run out of operating capital, and is set to be completely absorbed by BYJU’s, a person said on condition of anonymity.

WhiteHat Jr has been posting staggering losses. In FY21, the edtech startup recorded INR 1,690.4 Cr in losses. During the same fiscal, it spent INR 2,175.2 Cr to earn INR 483.9 Cr.

June 27 | Inc42 Exclusive: Ecommerce Platform Udaan Lays Off 180 Citing Cost Cutting

B2B ecommerce platform Udaan became the eighth ecommerce startup to lay employees off in 2022, laying off 180 employees citing cost-cutting. While the layoffs do not amount to a significant percentage of its employees, Inc42 sources said that there are more layoffs to come. The number of employees affected can reach as high as 600, sources said.

Udaan has conducted the layoffs mere months after it raised $250 Mn in a round from big-name investors such as Microsoft, M&G Prudential, Kaiser Permanente, Nomura, TOR and others. In a statement given to Inc42, Udaan said that it will support outgoing employees. Udaan has said that it will provide medical insurance, a compensation package and outplacement assistance.

Udaan generated INR 5,919 Cr in revenues at an expense of INR 8,742 Cr in FY21. The startup narrowed its loss to INR 2,482.3 Cr in FY21 from INR 2,518.7 Cr in FY20. According to an internal mail sent a week before the layoff, the CEO Vaibhav Gupta had said that Udaan was en route to hit positive unit economics by the end of the June quarter. However, the startup still cited unit economics as a reason to lay people off.

June 20 | Inc42 Exclusive: Sequoia Surge-backed Aqgromalin Lays Off 80 After Investors Back Out

Chennai-based Animal husbandry and aquaculture startup Aqgromalin laid off 80 full-time employees from its corporate offices as a funding round did not materialise. The layoffs account for 30% of the startup’s total workforce and have impacted marketing, sales and support, among other teams.

The funding round was supposed to be led by a Korean fund, which pulled out on the day of signing the deal. The layoffs came almost five months after Aqgromalin raised $5.25 Mn in a pre-Series A round from the likes of Sequoia India’s Surge, Omnivore Partners and Zephyr Peacock India.

The layoffs have also likely prompted a pivot in the startup’s business, as Inc42 sources told that Aqgromalin might look to move away from animal husbandry and focus only on its aquaculture business. The Chennai-based startup is also in talks for a potential merger, with Licious coming up as a potential candidate.

June 18 | Social Commerce Startup CityMall Lays Off 191 Employees Citing Restructuring

Gurugram-based social commerce startup CityMall has laid off 191 employees, both on-roll and off-roll, across multiple positions citing restructuring. The move comes three months after the startup had raised $75 Mn in its Series C round of funding.

The startup has shuttered its operations in Noida and is likely to do the same at the warehouse in Jaipur, according to Inc42 sources. The startup has also closed two dark stores for one-day delivery in Rohtak and Gurugram.

CityMall recorded a loss of INR 15.18 Cr in FY21, having spent INR 28.9 Cr to make INR 15.18 Cr. A CityMall spokesperson, confirming the development, told Inc42 that the startup will provide outgoing employees with outplacement assistance to find jobs at other places.

June 17 | Inc42 Exclusive: Unacademy Lays Off 150 Employees, Takes Total Layoffs To 1,150

It has been a difficult few months to be an edtech employee, and this is far more evident at Unacademy than anywhere else.

The edtech unicorn has conducted four separate layoffs citing cost-cutting, performance reviews, restructuring and whatnot, as it pivots to offline and perhaps more interestingly, into SaaS with Cohesive, all in a bid to achieve profitability.

In late March, Inc42 first reported that in a cost-cutting exercise, the edtech startup had laid off more than 125 consultants from its PrepLadder team. PrepLadder, which was acquired by Unacademy in July 2020 for $50 Mn, gives students material for competitive exams such as IIT/JEE, NEET and so on.

Days later, Unacademy laid off more than 200 teachers in a cost restructuring exercise. Inc42 exclusively reported that the edtech unicorn fired the educators based on their poor performance. In early April, the startup laid teachers off again, this time firing 600 teachers. The layoffs, according to a company spokesperson, were based on several assessments to determine the performance.

The latest layoff has seen Unacademy lay off 150 more employees, mostly from its sales and operations verticals. According to Inc42 sources, the impacted employees are from Unacademy Group’s core business, Unacademy, and PrepLadder.

June 16 | Inc42 Exclusive: IPO-Bound PharmEasy Lays Off 40 Employees From Subsidiary Docon Technologies 

PharmEasy’s parent company, API Holdings has laid off 40 employees from its subsidiary Docon Technologies, an EMR or electronic medical record solutions provider. Docon has seen layoffs mostly across the sales background, such as business development managers, cluster heads and area managers.

Docon has been taken apart and incorporated into PharmEasy by API Holdings, forming PharmEasy One. According to Inc42 sources, many of the employees had resigned following the restructuring, and the remaining 40 employees were the ones that were laid off from the Docon team.

Docon Technologies made a loss of INR 29.7 Cr in FY21 against a total income of INR 2.25 Cr. Currently, it has stopped all on-ground operations and is working virtually.

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June 14 | Inc42 Exclusive: Breathe Well-being Lays Off 50 To Cut Costs

Gurugram-based healthtech startup Breathe Well-being laid off around 50 employees or around 30% of its total workforce over the last few weeks in a bid to cut costs and extend its runway. The sales, operations, tech, and talent acquisitions, among others, are the teams that were impacted by the layoffs.

Per Inc42 sources, the startup had been aggressively hiring until April, looking to raise fresh funding. However, in failing to do so, it has not only laid off existing employees but also rescinded offer letters from employees that were supposed to join soon.

As per FY21, the startup had incurred a total loss of INR 2.27 Cr, while generating sales worth INR 39.2 Lakh, registering expenses of INR 2.66 Cr. The company had last raised $5.5 Mn in a funding round last August.

June 10 | Inc42 Exclusive: Logistics SaaS Startup FarEye Lays Off 250 Employees Citing Restructuring

New Delhi-based logistics SaaS startup FarEye has laid off 250 employees this week, impacting employees across offices in India, North America and Europe. FarEye has laid off across its product & engineering, professional services, talent acquisition, quality analysts, sales and developers teams, among others.

According to founder and CEO Kushal Nahata, the layoffs have happened because of a shift in focus of the startup and internal restructuring. He said that the laid-off employees will receive “rightful benefits and entitlements”, though employees that talked with Inc42 blame extensive hiring for the layoffs.

Notably, the layoffs come slightly over a year after FarEye raised $100 Mn in a Series E round. The startup has raised $150 Mn so far. FarEye recorded losses of INR 62 Cr on a standalone basis in FY21, having incurred an expenditure of INR 142.2 Cr during the same period.

June 9 | Inc42 Exclusive: Edtech Startup Yellow Class Lays Off 19 Employees

Elevation Capital-backed edtech startup Yellow Class has let go of around 19 employees in recent weeks. The startup had informed its team about the layoffs on May 19, as per Inc42 sources.

While Inc42 sources hinted that a lack of funds is the reason behind the layoffs, founder Anshul Garg denied any such claims. He agreed on the layoff count but said the layoffs were part of restructuring as Yellow Class has chosen to focus deeply on fewer initiatives. The startup had a total workforce ranging from 120 to 130 on its payroll.

The layoffs have come almost 10 months after Yellow Class raised $6 Mn in its Series A round led by Elevation Capital along with a clutch of angel investors including Vidit Aatrey, and Dhruv Agarwala.

June 7 | Sequoia-Backed Gold Loans Startup Rupeek Lays Off 200 People To Cut Costs

The Bengaluru-based gold loans provider Rupeek laid off 200 people in a bid to cut costs. The laid-off workforce represents 10-15% of Rupeek’s total workforce, a company spokesman said, adding that the startup will support the outgoing employees without sharing any details.

Rupeek’s layoffs came five months after it had raised $34 Mn in January 2022, valuing the startup at over $600 Mn. So far, the fintech soonicorn has raised $134 Mn in venture capital funding.

Incidentally, the startup reported a net loss of INR 156.5 Cr in FY21, having incurred a total expense of INR 245 Cr. The startup reported a net income of INR 88.5 Cr in FY21.

June 4 | SoftBank-Backed Edtech Startup Eruditus Lays Off 40 Employees After Resizing Expansion Plans

Mumbai-based edtech unicorn Eruditus laid off 40 employees from its workforce. The company has rolled back its expansion plans to around 100-150 hirings this year, eliminating the need for a large talent acquisition team.

“So that team (talent acquisition), unfortunately, has been affected. And yes, we have downsized that team because we don’t need the same set of people,” Eruditus cofounder and CEO Ashwin Damera said.

According to Damera, Eruditus scaled down its expansion plans to achieve profitability in the near term, saying that the startup’s India business is already profitable.

June 2 | Inc42 Exclusive: Info Edge-Backed Yojak Fires 140 Employees, Shuts Domestic Operations

Gurugram-based construction-focused ecommerce startup Yojak laid off 140 employees in April and May. Yojak is also shutting down its domestic operations and will now focus on Yojak Exports to export construction materials and equipment.

The startup, backed by Info Edge, ran out of funds to operate its domestic operations, sources claimed. Out of the 140 employees it has asked to leave, 60 were full-time, while 80 were contractual hirings. Yojak founder Rachit Garg further told Inc42 that the startup has laid off many third-party workers, without sharing any numbers for the same.

Yojak’s employee benefits expenses increased by 40-50% since January 2022 owing to its aggressive hiring, which saw its runway shrink significantly.

June 1 | Edtech Startup Udayy Shuts Down, Leaves 100 Employees Jobless

Gurugram-based edtech startup Udayy said that it will be shutting down operations, three years after it was founded by Saumya Yadav in 2019. This has left 100 people that it employed without a job.

At the time of the shutdown, the edtech claimed to have users across 45 cities, with 400 classes a day being operated. Udayy had last raised $2.5 Mn in January last year in a seed funding round, backed by the likes of Alpha Wave Global and InfoEdge Ventures. In all, the early stage startup had raised $13.5 Mn of institutional capital.

Udayy’s founder and CEO told Inc42 that it has given severances to its employees and contractural teachers. After winding up operations, Udayy will also return $8.5 Mn to some investors.

May 31 | Inc42 Exclusive: Indiabulls’ Social Commerce Venture Yaari Lays off 150 Employees

The social commerce platform Yaari, a venture of Indiabulls, asked almost 150 employees to submit their resignations in the last week of April. The impacted employees, from the supply support, customer support, business development and marketing teams, account for 60% of its total workforce.

Yaari looked to compete with the likes of Meesho and Trell, but it was underfunded by several orders of magnitude as compared to the two unicorns. According to several employees Inc42 talked with, the company was not doing well. Even so, the employees were reassured of their jobs.

In the aftermath of the layoffs, Yaari’s tech team has been absorbed by Dhani.com, another Indiabulls-backed ecommerce venture. Yaari itself will be merged with Dhani.com as well.

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May 30 | MPL Lays Off 100 Employees, Exits Indonesia, Shuts Down Streaming

Mobile Premier League (MPL), the fantasy gaming unicorn, laid off 100 people from multiple teams. The layoff has impacted about 10% of its total workforce as the unicorn exits Indonesia and shuts down its streaming service.

In an email to employees, MPL cofounders Sai Srinivas and Shubh Malhotra said, “It is time to make the difficult decision to redeploy our resources in other parts of our business to ensure our long-term health and success as a company.”

The unicorn had last raised $150 Mn in funding in September 2021, becoming one of India’s 100 unicorns at that point. The layoffs come eight months after the said fundraise.

May 27 | Inc42 Exclusive: FrontRow Lays Off 145 Employees To Cut Costs

Extracurricular edtech startup FrontRow laid off 145 employees across sales, quality control and HR teams. The layoff, impacting almost a third of the startup’s total employees, has been done to cut costs and increase the startup’s runway. According to Inc42 sources, the sales team alone saw 100 people fired.

FrontRow founder Ishaan Preet Singh told Inc42 that the decision was taken to ensure that the startup has over 24 months of runway. “This included letting go of ~30% of our team, primarily in sales, to make sure that we come out of this market stronger,” he added.

FrontRow laid off employees eight months after it raised $14 Mn in a Series A funding round, having raised $17 Mn in funding overall, having the backing of the likes of Deepika Padukone, and several other angel investors.

May 24 | Invact Metaversity Crashes; Lays Off 66% Of Workforce

Invact Metaversity, founded by ex-Twitter India head Manish Maheshwari, started as a promising edtech startup, offering a 16-week MBA alternative for around INR 2 Lakh. The first course was supposed to start on May 12.

However, even before anything like that, the Metaversity is all but closed up, having laid off 20 out of the 30 employees that were working from the Bengaluru office. Maheshwari had announced his plans in December 2021 and the startup had raised more than $5 Mn from some of India’s biggest angel investors.

Even so, Metaversity’s fall from grace has come as little surprise, as the founders struggled to find the right product and the right approach. The startup lacked a shared vision among the leadership.

Last evening, Metaversity said that Maheshwari has stepped down from his position as CEO.

May 21 | Inc42 Exclusive: MFine Lays Off 600 Employees Prompting Protests

In what proved to be another example of apathy of a startup, healthtech startup MFine fired almost 75% of its workforce citing financial difficulties.

However, the writing was already on the wall for MFine. The company had reported a loss after tax worth INR 102.7 Cr in FY21, as it spent INR 116 Cr to make INR 12.9 Cr. According to an ex-employee, MFine had already been firing people in small batches since October 2021.

Entire teams were laid off in the process, which triggered protests against the startup as 100 former employees gathered outside MFine’s Bengaluru office. The protestors demanded the rollout of the full May salary along with an early release of their full & final payment.

However, not only did MFine not let Inc42 enter the office, it did not allow female ex-employees, which included a pregnant woman, to use the restroom.

May 19 | Inc42 Exclusive: Cars24 Lays Off 600 Citing Automation, Cost Cutting

Used car unicorn Cars24 also joined the list of startups that have laid employees off. Mostly laying off across lower divisions, Cars24 cited automating operations and cutting costs as the two reasons for laying off 7% of its total workforce.

On the other hand, the unicorn has raised $950 Mn across its lifetime. These layoffs come five months after it raised $400 Mn at a valuation of $3.3 Bn. Speaking on the layoffs, a Cars24 spokesperson told Inc42, “This is business as usual – performance-linked exits that happen every year.”

The startup is looking for an IPO over the next 18-24 months, joining the list of Indian startups that are waiting for the storm to pass to go for a public listing.

May 17 | Vedantu Lays Off 624 Employees In 15 Days Citing Restructuring

Edtech startup Vedantu laid off a combined 624 employees across two layoffs within a span of 15 days, citing cost restructuring as the primary reason.

First, Inc42 exclusively reported that the edtech startup laid off 200 employees. The edtech startup said that it will be hiring around 1,000 people in the coming months. However, two weeks in, Vedantu conducted another layoff, this time firing 424 employees.

The startup has conducted the layoffs after it achieved the unicorn tag last year after raising $100 Mn in funding. A blog post by CEO Vamsi Krishna showed that the startup will extend health benefits for laid-off employees and their families till August 5, 2022.

May 10 | Inc42 Exclusive: WhiteHat Jr Conducts ‘Soft’ Layoffs As 1,000 Employees Resign

In a strange and probably the first case of its kind, Indian startup WhiteHat Jr asked its remote employees to either join offices or hand in their resignations. Inc42 had exclusively reported the resignations of 800 employees, however, after publishing the story several employees reached out, claiming the number to be more than 1,000.

According to ex-employees, this was a layoff in disguise. Interestingly, Inc42 learnt that if an employee is based out of Gurugram, they were not allowed to join WhiteHat Jr’s Gurugram’s office, but the Bengaluru office for a similar job role.

The edtech startup’s soft layoffs have triggered the debate between working remotely and working from the office as more and more companies are asking their employees to join. However, WhiteHat Jr gave the employees no choice at all.

April 21 | Ola Restructures Quick Commerce Business; Lays Off 2,100 Dark Store Workers

After going bullish on quick commerce twice before, Bhavish Aggarwal-led Ola’s quick commerce arm Ola Dash went for restructuring its entire business, which resulted in the unicorn laying off around 2,100 dark store workers. Ola ended the contracts of these workers who were hired to man its 200 dark stores.

In terms of its dark stores, Ola has reportedly scaled down half of them and may even shut a few of them down. The unicorn had run into regulator challenges with bringing in its $500 Mn term loan from foreign lenders and that had prompted the scale back.

However, doing a 180 recently, Ola has announced that it will go for quick commerce again, scaling down its food delivery operations this time around. This means that laying off those 2,100 people meant nothing, as the company tries hard to pivot away from its core business of cab aggregation.

April 11 | Layoffs At Meesho: 150 Employees Fired Citing Restructuring

The ecommerce unicorn Meesho laid off 150 employees, saying that it is restructuring Meesho Superstore which has impacted the said number of employees.

Meesho said, “As we look to boost efficiencies in the light of the integration, a small number of full-time roles and certain third-party positions on six-month contracts at Meesho Superstore were reassessed to remove redundancies with the core business.”

The layoffs happened less than seven months after the unicorn raised $570 Mn in funding. The ecommerce and social commerce unicorn tried its hands at grocery delivery with a pilot project in Karnataka less than nine months ago. It had plans to expand to Tier 2+ cities, but it has had to scale back following limited success.

March 26 | Furlenco Lays Off 180 Employees To Cut Costs

Furniture startup Furlenco laid off around 180 employees to cut costs and achieve profitability ahead of a public offering, according to several employees Inc42 spoke to.

Around 95% of the employees let go were in customer-facing roles which include customer support and other similar roles. The startup claims to have extended medical coverage for the impacted employees, which constitute almost a third of the startup’s total workforce.

The layoffs come as the company had raised $165 Mn in funding last year alone, including a $24 Mn funding round in February 2022 itself.

March 14 | Trell Lays Off Half Of Its Workforce To Extend Runway, Cut Costs

Bengaluru-based social commerce platform Trell laid off 300 employees after the company’s founders were alleged of financial irregularities and the company saw its $100 Mn funding round fall through.

Amid the boardroom tussle, which saw the company’s investors order an investigation against the founders and the founders hitting back, the company’s employees suffered.

The layoffs were cited to be an exercise to cut costs and extend its runway as Trell looked to survive. The company incurred a loss of 78.4 Cr in FY21. This is an almost 550% increase from INR 12.07 Cr that it had incurred in FY20.

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March 10 | Blinkit Lays Off Nearly 1,600 Employees After Splurging INR 600 Cr

Quick commerce startup Blinkit reportedly laid off employees across major cities including Mumbai, Hyderabad and Kolkata. The layoffs impacted close to 5% of Blinkit’s overall workforce, which amounts to around 1,600 people, including riders, pickers and store managers.

The layoffs came on the heels of Zomato investing $150 Mn in the cash-strapped company, which had also picked up a loan of $10 Mn from Innoven Capital.

Blinkit has had to cut back after reportedly splurging INR 600 Cr on expanding its business last year between November and February. The deep discounting tactics backfired and the startup cut costs and corners to reduce its cash burn by firing employees.

February 23 | OkCredit Lays Off 35% Of Workforce To Change Business Model

Bengaluru-based bookkeeping startup OkCredit laid off 40 employees or around 35% of its total workforce. Most of these layoffs were from the backend, tech and engineering teams.

The Tiger Global and Lightening-backed startup said that it is focusing on its fintech initiatives and strengthening its growth channels, which has resulted in the startup laying off the said employees. OkCredit said that the laid off employees were being supported by outplacement services and extended medical insurance.

In FY21, the startup spent INR 114.6 Cr, to earn a mere INR 3.79 Lakh in sales revenue, forming another possible reason for the layoffs.

February 21 | Lido Lays Off 150 Employees To Cut Costs

Edtech startup Lido’s founder Sahil Sheth, during a virtual town hall, told the company employees that they were in a financial crunch. Following this, the company asked 150+ employees to submit their resignation as it looked to raise funds or possible acquisition of Lido.

The company assured these employees that they would be paid the pending salaries for January 2022 and the 1st week of February 2022 within ’30 to 90 days’, but to date, their salaries are pending, which has prompted them to take the fight to social media.

Since its launch in 2019, Lido Learning has raised close to $24 Mn in funding. The layoff had come only six months after it raised $10 Mn from Ronnie Screwvala’s Unilazer Ventures.


This is a running article. We will add as new information comes in.

If you would like to report a layoff, pay cut etc. at a startup, write to us at [email protected].

Last updated on March 5, 2024, 09:00 AM IST.

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