ADVERTISEMENT

Udaan Joins Startups That Have Fired Employees Amid Funding Slowdown

Last month, edtech firm Vedantu fired 424 employees, taking its total tally to at least 624 in the past 3 months.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>(Photo:&nbsp;<strong><a href="https://pxhere.com/en/photo/1336594">PxHere</a>)</strong></p></div>
(Photo: PxHere)

Udaan, a Bengaluru-based business-to-business e-tailer, has joined a growing list of Indian startups firms that have fired employees to cut costs amid uncertainties prevailing in the market and funding slowdown.

“As the market evolves... we have taken various steps to enhance efficiency, refine our cost structure and grow faster in our journey to achieve strong unit economics,” a company spokesperson told BQ Prime. “However, the efficiency enhancement exercise has also resulted in certain redundancies in the system, with some roles no longer required.”

The startup didn’t disclose the number of employees it laid off but acknowledged that media reports are correct. Inc42 first reported that the company fired 180 employees.

Udaan is not the only unicorn that had to resort to layoffs. Last month, edtech firm Vedantu fired 424 employees, taking its total tally to at least 624 in the past three months. “War in Europe, impending recession fears, and Fed rate interest hikes have led to inflationary pressures with massive correction in stocks globally and in India as well. Given this environment, capital will be scarce for upcoming quarters,” its CEO Vamsi Krishna had said in a blog post.

Startups such as Meesho, Trell, Rupeek, Blinkit, Cars24 and MPL, too, fired employees. Crypto platform Coinbase had to cut about 8% of its Indian staff.

Sequoia Saw It Coming

In an internally-circulated presentation last month, Sequoia addressed its portfolio founders, labelling the current situation as a “crucible moment”.

“We do not believe that this is going to be another steep correction followed by an equally swift V-shaped recovery like we saw at the outset of the pandemic,” the 50-year-old venture capital firm said in the presentation titled ‘Adapting to Endure’.

“Winning in the years ahead is going to depend on making hard, decisive choices—confronting uncomfortable challenges that may have been masked during the exuberance and distortions of free capital over the past two years,” it had said.

Opinion
Startup Street: India’s 100th Unicorn, Droom’s Altered IPO Plans, Sequoia’s Wake-Up Call And More