Instacart cuts 250 jobs after reporting increased revenue

Another day, another layoff occuring in the tech world. Instacart, the popular grocery delivery and pick-up service has announced the termination of 250 employees — about seven percent of its workforce. The layoffs are primarily individuals from middle management or who work on advertising through platforms like Google Ads and Roku. Most of the layoffs will go into effect by March 31 with Instacart estimating that the process will cost the company between $19 million and $24 million due to factors like severance pay and employee benefits.

Instacart released the news along with its fourth-quarter earnings. Despite choosing to layoff employees, the company reported a six percent increase in revenue, jumping from $803 million to $804 million, year-over-year. At the same time, Instacart is seeing the voluntary departure of three of its executives: the chief operating officer, chief technology officer and chief architect.

The layoffs follow only a short time after Instacart's September 2023 IPO. Unlike many companies that barely (or didn't) survive the COVID-19 pandemic, Instacart thrived. It allowed people to stay and still receive their groceries and other necessary items. Now, it exists in 5,500 cities and, like most companies of the past year, is focusing on building its AI capabilities. But, despite its increased revenue, the company's layoffs signal that not everything is going as planned over at Instacart

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/instacart-cuts-250-jobs-after-reporting-increased-revenue-112503431.html?src=rss https://www.engadget.com/instacart-cuts-250-jobs-after-reporting-increased-revenue-112503431.html?src=rss
Created 1y | Feb 14, 2024, 11:40:12 AM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Romero Games says reports of its death are greatly exaggerated

It appeared that Romero Games might have shuttered as a consequence of the

Jul 7, 2025, 11:30:11 PM | Engadget
Epic Games ends its antitrust lawsuit against Samsung

Epic Games has dropped its suit against Samsung. "We’re dismissing our court case against Samsung following the parties’ discussions," Epic CEO and founder Tim Sweeney

Jul 7, 2025, 11:30:10 PM | Engadget
Walmart Deals 2025 are live with a bunch of anti-Prime Day sales to shop now

Amazon Prime Day is usually met with competing sales from other retailers, and this year is no different.

Jul 7, 2025, 11:30:08 PM | Engadget
Apple is still trying to overturn the ban on the Apple Watch blood oxygen sensor

Apple is making another attempt to appeal the trade ban that forced it to remove the blood oxygen sensor from its smartwatches,

Jul 7, 2025, 9:10:13 PM | Engadget