Udemy Announces Layoffs Without Saying ‘Layoffs’
Udemy’s latest ‘Strategic Business Update’ uses corporate euphemisms to signal job cuts while pivoting to enterprise clients.
In its recent earnings report, Udemy announced a “Strategic Business Update” that includes phrases like “reallocating resources” and “reducing organizational layers.”
These changes have two primary goals:
- Achieve $25 million in annualized structural cost-savings
- Focus on enterprise companies with more than 1,000 employees
Though not explicitly mentioned, the references to cost savings and reducing organizational layers are clear signs of impending layoffs.
In Udemy’s last round of layoffs in February 2023, the company estimated cost savings of $30–32 million annually, which I estimated to represent around 200 job cuts. This new round appears to be of similar scale, with some jobs likely to be moved to “lower-cost geographies.”
Despite this “favorable” announcement (from a stock market perspective), Udemy’s stock price dropped by approximately 20%, contributing to a 46% decline in 2024.
Its 2024 Q2 revenue of $194.4 million is less than its first quarter revenue, marking the first time the company has ever experienced a quarter-over-quarter revenue drop. The primary culprit was Udemy’s Consumer revenues, which fell to $73.8 million from $79.2 million in 2024 Q1. This segment is now approaching pre-pandemic levels.
While Udemy has struggled with consumer revenue growth, Coursera has faced challenges with business revenue growth. The reason behind this difference lies in their approaches: Content versus Credentials.
At the time of publishing, Udemy’s market was $1.11B.
Marcus
Seems in the MOOC market some clean up´s are going on: Here Udemy, on the other site the bankruptcy of 2U parent of edX, and Coursera faces also headwinds.
By the way, it would be great when you can write some words regarding the 2U bankruptcy, and what is your view.
Mike Altoff
Udemy Business has also fired their President. Things do not seem to be going well internally
Joao Santos
In my humble opinion, YouTube and all its amazing content creators in the education field are revolutionizing online learning, making it super high quality, universally accessible, and free. No MOOC can compete with that.