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    Home » Indeed, Glassdoor Cutting 1,300 Employees, Adapting to AI
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    Indeed, Glassdoor Cutting 1,300 Employees, Adapting to AI

    Arabian Media staffBy Arabian Media staffJuly 11, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Recruit Holdings, the parent company of career sites Indeed and Glassdoor, is laying off 1,300 employees across the two sites.

    The job cuts represent about 6% of Recruit’s overall global workforce and will especially impact U.S. employees working on the research and development, people operations, and sustainability teams, per CBS.

    The news was announced in a leaked internal email, viewed by TechCrunch, which Recruit CEO Hisayuki “Deko” Idekoba sent to staff on Thursday.

    Idekoba, 50, wrote in the email that the company was restructuring amid a broader AI shift. Citing internal data, he stated that AI helps people find a job every 2.2 seconds, and that the company is working on “simplifying hiring by building a better job seeker and employer experience using AI.”

    Related: AI Is Going to ‘Replace Everybody’ in Several Fields, According to the ‘Godfather of AI.’ Here’s Who He Says Should Be ‘Terrified.’

    “AI is changing the world, and we must adapt by ensuring our product delivers truly great experiences,” Idekoba wrote in the memo.

    Hisayuki Idekoba, president and chief executive officer of Recruit Holdings. Photographer: Shoko Takayasu/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    The restructuring also impacts C-suite executives at Recruit. Per the memo, Glassdoor CEO Christian Sutherland-Wong will leave his position on October 1 after a decade with the company. Indeed’s Chief People and Sustainability Officer, LaFawn Davis, is also departing the firm.

    Idekoba has long-standing ties to Indeed. He led Recruit’s acquisition of the company for a reported $750 million to $1 billion in 2012. He was also deeply involved with Glassdoor, heading Recruit’s acquisition of the company in 2018 for $1.2 billion.

    Idekoba served as Indeed’s CEO from 2013 to 2019, and currently lives in Austin, where Indeed is based, per Bloomberg. He was appointed CEO of Recruit in 2021. In June, he took on the additional responsibility of returning to Indeed as president and CEO.

    “We’re in a once-in-a-generation moment when technology can really change lives,” Idekoba said in a June press release. “Hiring is still too slow and too hard, and we’re using AI to make it simple and more personal — for both job seekers and employers.”

    Related: Salesforce Has Used AI to Reduce Personnel Costs By $50 Million This Year. Here’s Which Roles Are Affected.

    Other companies have also restructured due to AI. For example, Morgan Stanley cut 2,000 employees in March, with a source stating that some were let go because AI had automated their roles at the bank. In May, IBM CEO Arvind Krishna said that the company used AI to replace hundreds of employees in its human resources department.

    Career sites are also feeling the crunch of competition from behemoths like LinkedIn, which has more than one billion users. Increased competition and declining revenue led CareerBuilder + Monster to file for bankruptcy last month.

    Recruit Holdings, the parent company of career sites Indeed and Glassdoor, is laying off 1,300 employees across the two sites.

    The job cuts represent about 6% of Recruit’s overall global workforce and will especially impact U.S. employees working on the research and development, people operations, and sustainability teams, per CBS.

    The news was announced in a leaked internal email, viewed by TechCrunch, which Recruit CEO Hisayuki “Deko” Idekoba sent to staff on Thursday.

    The rest of this article is locked.

    Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.



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