Tech Layoffs
Groupon Cuts 400 Jobs, Nearly 25% of Workforce, in AI-Native Restructuring
Groupon will cut up to 400 positions — nearly a quarter of its workforce — as part of Project Foundry, a multi‑year restructuring to become an AI‑native company. The cuts are expected by September 2026. Groupon joins Meta, Snap, and SentinelOne in explicitly framing layoffs as AI‑driven transformation.
Groupon to Cut 400 Jobs in AI‑Native Pivot
Groupon will cut up to 400 positions globally — nearly a quarter of its workforce — as part of a restructuring plan to become an "AI‑native" company, according to an SEC filing dated May 21 and first reported by Fast Company. The layoffs affect both employees and contractors and are expected to be completed by the end of Q3 2026, which closes September 30.
The company had approximately 1,734 employees as of April 28, per a separate SEC filing. If the cuts apply only to employees, they represent roughly 23% of the workforce. The actual percentage could be higher if contractors are included in the 400 figure. The Wall Street Journal described the move as part of a broader restructuring to become an AI‑native company.
Project Foundry: Groupon's AI Bet
The layoffs are tied to what 1 described as "Project Foundry," Groupon's internal AI restructuring initiative, which could continue through 2027, suggesting this is not a one‑time reduction but the beginning of a multi‑year transformation. The company is betting that AI can automate significant portions of its operations — from deal curation and customer service to marketing and merchant onboarding.
Groupon's board approved the restructuring plan on May 21, and the company filed the details with the SEC the same day. The stock rose on the news, a pattern that has become grimly familiar in tech: investors reward companies for cutting headcount and promising AI‑driven efficiency, even when those cuts represent real people losing their jobs.
The Pattern: AI Restructuring, Not Just Layoffs
Groupon joins a growing list of companies that have explicitly framed layoffs as part of an AI transformation. The Los Angeles Times noted that the Chicago‑based company is the latest in a string of tech firms announcing workforce reductions "amid pivot to AI." SentinelOne cut 8% of its workforce earlier this month, Meta cut 3,200 Bay Area workers in May, and Snap laid off 1,000 employees — all citing AI‑driven restructuring.
What distinguishes Groupon's case is the explicit framing. The company is not just cutting costs — it is restructuring the entire organization around AI, calling the initiative Project Foundry and planning it through 2027. This is not a reaction to a downturn. It is a proactive bet that AI can replace a significant portion of human labor in e‑commerce operations.
What AI‑Native Means for Groupon's Business
Groupon's core business — matching local deals with consumers, managing merchant relationships, and handling customer support — involves high volumes of relatively routine transactions. That makes it a natural candidate for AI automation. Deal descriptions can be generated by LLMs. Customer service inquiries can be handled by AI agents. Merchant onboarding and deal verification can be automated with computer vision and document processing.
But the shift from a human‑driven marketplace to an AI‑driven one carries risks. Fast Company noted that the restructuring plan could continue through 2027, which means multiple rounds of disruption. The question is whether Groupon can maintain the quality of its merchant relationships and deal curation while replacing human judgment with AI — a challenge that every company attempting an AI‑native transformation will face.
What This Means for Tech Workers in 2026
For builders and developers, Groupon's announcement is another data point in a year that has seen AI‑driven layoffs accelerate. The pattern is clear: companies are not waiting for a recession to cut headcount. They are actively restructuring around AI, and the cuts are being framed as strategic investments rather than cost‑saving measures.
The silver lining is that these transformations create demand for AI engineering talent. Companies pivoting to AI‑native operations need developers who can build AI agents, integrate LLMs into workflows, and design automated systems. The challenge is that the skills required for these roles are different from the ones being eliminated. The message for tech workers in 2026 is unambiguous: if your job can be described as a series of routine transactions, an AI agent is probably being trained to do it right now.
Sources
- 1.Fast Company(fastcompany.com)
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