Dropbox
is
cutting
its
workforce
by
20
percent
today
—
laying
off
528
people
—
amid
slowing
growth
for
its
core
cloud
storage
business.
The
latest
round
of
cuts
comes
after
Dropbox
laid
off
around
500
people
in
early
2023
to
redirect
efforts
to
its
AI
division.
“We’re
making
more
significant
cuts
in
areas
where
we’re
over-invested
or
underperforming
while
designing
a
flatter,
more
efficient
team
structure
overall,”
writes
Dropbox
CEO
Drew
Houston
in
a
blog
post
titled
An
update
from
Drew.
At
the
same
time,
Houston
mentions
that
the
market
is
moving
towards
where
the
company
placed
its
“biggest
bets,”
which
includes
Dropbox’s
Dash
AI
search
product.
For
its
second-quarter
earnings
this
year
in
August,
Dropbox
reported
an
increase
of
63,000
paid
users
quarter
over
quarter,
which
is
light
compared
to
its
total
18
million-plus
user
base.
As
reported
by
TechCrunch,
Q2
was
Dropbox’s
slowest
growth
in
company
history,
and
its
shares
lost
more
than
20
percent
of
their
value
year
to
date
in
August.
Houston
says
Dropbox
will
say
more
about
its
2025
strategy
to
grow
its
core
business
and
speed
up
new
products
in
the
coming
days.
Affected
employees
will
get
sixteen
weeks
of
severance
pay,
equity,
bonus
plan
lump
sums,
payouts
of
approved
leave,
and
immigration
consultation
for
those
on
work
visas.
Dropbox
says
most
of
the
payouts
will
take
place
in
fiscal
Q4
2024.
Original author: Umar Shakir
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