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Recruit Holdings , the Japanese parent of Indeed and Glassdoor, will reduce headcount by around 1,300 across the two job ...
In an email to staff, Indeed’s CEO talks clearly and directly about job cuts, delivering a great example for other leaders.
Indeed and Glassdoor — both owned by the Japanese group Recruit Holdings Co. — are cutting roughly 1,300 jobs as part of a broader move to combine operations and shift more focus toward artificial ...
As AI barrels into the workplace, job search firms like Indeed and Glassdoor are replacing workers with the technology.
Indeed and Glassdoor are cutting 1,300 jobs as Recruit Holdings restructures for AI. The layoffs will mainly impact US roles in research, people operations, and sustainability.
Indeed and Glassdoor are cutting 1,300 jobs as Recruit Holdings restructures for AI. The layoffs will mainly impact US roles in research, people operations, and sustainability.
Indeed and Glassdoor have belonged to Recruit Holdings since 2012 and 2018, respectively. The CEO said operations of the latter will be merged into Indeed.
When he announced mass layoffs earlier this year, Workday CEO Carl Eschenbach invited employees to consider the bigger ...
Job search giants Indeed and Glassdoor, sister companies, are laying off 1,300 employees. These layoffs follow similar mass layoffs from the company in recent years.
The Indeed and Glassdoor cuts are expected to mostly affect those based in the U.S., around 6 percent of those working in areas of research and development, and people and sustainability, Idekoba ...
Job sites Indeed and Glassdoor will cut about 6% of their workforce and Glassdoor will be folded into Indeed, parent company Recruit Holdings said.