DevOps
A robotic hand interacts with a code display, illustrating AI-assisted software development.
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Code hosting biz is trimming its global footprint and flattening its management layer
GitLab has opened the voluntary separation window and hopes an unspecified number of employees will exit the busniess to help it become “the trusted enterprise platform for software creation in the AI era.”
According to CEO Bill Staples, the company’s effort to trim its workforce differs from other AI-related layoffs.
“This restructure process is not like others you may be seeing in the news,” wrote Staples in a blog post. “Of course AI is changing the way we work and is part of our transformation plan, but this is not an AI optimization or cost cutting exercise.”
What is it then? Well, according to Staples, GitLab plans to use most of the money it saves by sacking staff to invest in its business.
We note that the five fundamental architectural bets at the heart of this business reorientation – agent-specific APIs; reworked CI/CD; a data model for surfacing context; governance; and support for human-owned, agent-assisted, and autonomous workloads – sound like infrastructure investments, the very thing other companies fuel with vacated payroll obligations.
But GitLab isn’t (so far as we can tell) returning freed funds to investors, initiating a stock buyback, larding executive bonuses, or launching an ill-advised metaverse venture that will consume $80 billion over five years. So maybe that’s the difference to which Staples alluded.
The other difference Staples cited is his company’s plan to have managers chat with employees about staying or going.
“Starting today, managers across the company are entering deeper conversations with leadership about how the restructuring principles land inside their teams,” he said. “Those conversations will inform the decision of impacted roles.”
There’s no word on the rubric for these retention-or-departure chats. Presumably employees deemed insufficiently enthused about the new direction will be encouraged to exit through the voluntary separation window. Absent that cooperation, defenestration at the hands of managers will likely follow.
While Staples has not provided target for the number of desired layoffs – details will be revealed during the company’s Q1 FY2027 financial report on June 2nd – he did set a territory footprint goal. “We’re reevaluating our operational footprint, and are planning to reduce the number of countries by up to 30 percent where we have small teams,” he said.
GitLab currently operates in 60 countries. That’s a lot of different corporate entities to run, tax laws to master, and offices to rent.
The code biz did not immediately respond to a request to clarify how “small teams” is defined. Nor does it disclose its headcount in recent annual reports. Accord