City
Epaper

Edtech firm Byju's lays off nearly 1,500 employees due to poor sales turnover

By Lokmat English Desk | Updated: February 3, 2023 14:15 IST

Edtech unicorn Byju's has laid off nearly 1,500 employees, in another round of layoffs according to media reports. According to ...

Open in App

Edtech unicorn Byju's has laid off nearly 1,500 employees, in another round of layoffs according to media reports. According to sources, the company in a fresh round of layoffs has asked more than 1,000 workers (or 15 per cent) to go, mostly from its engineering teams.

Byju's last year decided to lay off as many as 2,500 employees or five per cent of its workforce in order to achieve profitability by March 2023.In India, more than 21,000 employees have been laid off by more than 70 startups today, including from unicorns like Byju'S, Ola, MPL, Innovaccer, Unacademy, Vedantu, Cars24, OYO, Meesho, Udaan and many more.The edtech sector has laid off the most employees, with 16 edtech startups laying off more than 8,000 employees to date.

Tags: BYJU'SJob Cuts
Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyIT Layoffs 2025: Microsoft, Google, Apple Among 284 Tech Companies That Cut Jobs in First 5 Months

TechnologyProcter & Gamble Layoffs: FMCG Giant to Cut 7,000 Jobs Globally Over Next 2 Years

EntertainmentDisney Layoffs: US Entertainment Giant to Cut Hundreds of Jobs in TV, Film and Corporate Finance

InternationalUN May Reduce Its Staff By 20%, 6,900 Job Losses Amid Deepening Financial Crisis: Report

TechnologyIBM Layoffs: US-Based Tech Giant To Cut 8,000 Positions Due to Losses in HR Department

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAir India to cut international flights on wide body aircraft by 15 pc

TechnologyKarnataka security guard held for uploading nude videos, 13,500 obscene images found on phone

TechnologySAIL beefs up Indian Navy’s INS Arnala with special steel

TechnologyFM Sitharaman urges fintechs to look beyond cities, tap into rural India's potential

TechnologyMedia report on RBI scrutiny unverified and malicious: Standard Chartered Bank