This CEO laid off nearly 80% of his staff because they refused to adopt AI fast enough. 2 years later, he says he’d do it again

Eric Vaughan, CEO of enterprise-software powerhouse IgniteTech, told his employees that everything would now revolve around AI. · Fortune · IgniteTech
In this article:

Eric Vaughan, CEO of enterprise-software powerhouse IgniteTech, was unwavering as he reflected on the most radical decision of his decades-long career. In early 2023, convinced generative AI was an “existential” transformation, Vaughan looked at his team and saw a workforce not fully on board. His ultimate response: He ripped the company down to the studs, replacing nearly 80% of staff within a year, according to headcount figures reviewed by Fortune.

Over the course of 2023 and into the first quarter of 2024, Vaughan told Fortune, IgniteTech replaced hundreds of employees, declining to disclose a specific number. “That was not our goal,” he told Fortune. “It was extremely difficult … But changing minds was harder than adding skills.” It was, by any measure, a brutal reckoning—but Vaughan insists it was necessary, and said he’d do it again.

For Vaughan, the writing on the wall was clear and dramatic.

“In early 2023, we saw the light,” he told Fortune in an August 2025 interview, adding he believed every tech company was facing a crucial inflection point around adoption of artificial intelligence. “Now I’ve certainly morphed to believe that this is every company, and I mean that literally every company, is facing an existential threat by this transformation.”

Where others saw promise, Vaughan saw urgency—believing failing to get ahead on AI could doom even the most robust business. He called an all-hands meeting with his global remote team. Gone were the comfortable routines and quarterly goals. Instead, his message was direct: Everything would now revolve around AI. “We’re going to give a gift to each of you. And that gift is tremendous investment of time, tools, education, projects … to give you a new skill,” he explained. The company began reimbursing for AI tools and prompt-engineering classes, and even brought in outside experts to evangelize.

“Every single Monday was called ‘AI Monday,’” Vaughan said, with his mandate for staff that they could work only on AI. “You couldn’t have customer calls; you couldn’t work on budgets; you had to only work on AI projects.” He said this happened across the board, not just for tech workers, but also for sales, marketing, and everybody else at IgniteTech. “That culture needed to be built. That was the key.”

This was a major investment, he added: 20% of payroll was dedicated to a mass-learning initiative, and it failed because of mass resistance, even sabotage. Belief, Vaughan discovered, is a hard thing to manufacture.


  • McKinsey and General Catalyst execs say the era of ‘learn once, work forever’ is over

    Dec. jobs report due out Friday: Unemployment rate expectations
    Dec. jobs report due out Friday: Unemployment rate expectations
    Scroll back up to restore default view.
    In this article:

    If there is one point of consensus among the CES 2026 keynote speakers, it is that AI is reshaping technology with a speed and scale unlike any previous technological revolution.

    In a live taping on Tuesday of the All-In podcast, co-host Jason Calacanis interviewed Bob Sternfels, Global Managing Partner of McKinsey & Company, and Hemant Taneja, CEO of General Catalyst. Their discussion focused on how AI is transforming investment strategies and the workforce.

    “The world has completely changed,” Taneja said about the unprecedented growth of AI companies. He noted that while it took Stripe about 12 years to reach a $100 billion valuation, Anthropic, another General Catalyst portfolio company, soared from a $60 billion valuation last year to a “couple hundred billion dollars” this year.

    Taneja believes we are on the verge of seeing a new wave of trillion-dollar companies. “That’s not a pie-in-the-sky idea with Anthropic, OpenAI, and a couple of others,” he said.

    Calacanis pressed them on what’s driving this explosive growth. According to McKinsey’s Sternfels, while many companies are testing AI products, non-tech enterprises remain on the fence about full adoption. Sternfels says the question that McKinsey consultants often hear from CEOs is: “Do I listen to my CFO or my CIO right now?”

    CFOs, seeing little return on investment, argue for delaying implementation. Meanwhile, CIOs claim it’s “crazy” not to adopt AI because “we’ll be disrupted,” Sternfels said.

    Another key concern is how AI is reshaping the labor force. “Some people are looking at AI and they’re scared,” Calacanis said, noting concerns that AI could replace entry-level jobs traditionally filled by recent graduates. He asked Sternfels and Taneja for advice on what young people should do in this new landscape.

    Sternfels said that while AI models can handle many tasks, sound judgment and creativity remain the essential skills humans must bring to succeed in an AI-infused world.

    Meanwhile, Taneja argued that people must recognize that “skilling and re-skilling” will be a lifelong endeavor. “This idea that we spend 22 years learning and then 40 years working is broken,” he said.

    Calacanis agreed that in a world where it may take less time to build an AI agent than to train a new worker, people must find ways to stay relevant. “To stand out, you’re going to have to show chutzpah, drive, passion,” he said.

    Sternfels provided a glimpse into that future. While he expects McKinsey to have as many “personalized” AI agents as employees by the end of 2026, he noted that headcount will not necessarily decrease. Instead, the firm is shifting its composition; it’s increasing employees who work directly with clients by 25% while reducing back-office roles by the same percentage.

    Follow along with all of TechCrunch’s coverage of the annual CES conference here.


  • Klarna CEO says he feels ‘gloomy’ because AI is developing so quickly it’ll soon be able to do his entire job

    Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski warns of AI’s capabilities. · Fortune · Chris Ratcliffe—Bloomberg/Getty Images
    • Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski says AI has the power to take over all jobs, including his. Siemiatkowski’s company has already taken steps to replace human jobs with AI.

    Among the top concerns as artificial intelligence becomes more advanced is whether the technology has the power to take over jobs. One CEO firmly believes AI not only has the power to do menial or repetitive tasks, but also has the intelligence and reasoning to take over his own job as chief executive of a multibillion-dollar company.

    Sebastian Siemiatkowski, CEO of buy-now, pay-later platform Klarna, said AI’s reasoning capabilities make that possible.

    “To me, AI is capable of doing all our jobs, my own included,” Siemiatkowski said in a post on X earlier this year. “Because our work is simply reasoning combined with knowledge/experience. And the most critical breakthrough, reasoning, is behind us.”

    While Siemiatkowski said AI is capable of performing his duties as CEO, he’s “not super excited” about the prospect of his job becoming obsolete.

    “My work to me is a super important part of who I am, and realizing it might become unnecessary is gloomy,” Siemiatkowski said in the X post. “But I also believe we need to be honest with what we think will happen. And I [would] rather learn and explore than pretend it does not exist.”

    Klarna declined Fortune’s request for further comment.

    A 2023 survey by online education company EdX affirms some CEOs believe AI could take over their jobs. Nearly half of CEOs who responded said they believe “most” or “all” of their job should be completely automated or replaced by AI.

    Siemiatkowski is so confident in AI’s capabilities his company stopped hiring more than a year ago. Now AI is doing the work of hundreds of staff across the company. The Stockholm-based Klarna’s headcount fell 22% to 3,500 during the past year, mostly because of attrition, Siemiatkowski told Bloomberg last December. The BNPL company as of earlier this year had about 200 people using AI to do their core work, he told Bloomberg. Klarna is currently valued at around $14 billion.

    Siemiatkowski said, however, some Klarna employees are “rallying” to deploy as much AI as they can—mostly to make some extra money in their paychecks.


  • Our data shows that companies of 500 and fewer workers mostly avoided the AI layoffs. They’re making AI work for them

    Small business is trying a different tack. · Fortune · Getty Images

    Recently news outlets reported that layoff announcements have reached pandemic levels, which is highly concerning, but certainly not unforeseen. At the beginning of 2025, the World Economic Forum reported that 41% of organizations were planning to trim their workforces in the face of rapidly advancing AI. In the second half of the year, six in 10 business leaders were planning headcount reductions. But while trimming headcount cost may have been the most publicized strategy for surviving macroeconomic volatility, it wasn’t the only one.

    The Upwork Research Institute has identified a segment of companies that is maneuvering differently, poised to overtake enterprise organizations in innovation and resilience in 2026.

    Our research found that small- to medium-sized businesses, or SMBs, employing between 10 and 499 people, largely avoided the large-scale layoffs that dominated headlines. Instead, they used AI to change the scale equation, applied experimentation, and invested in flexible talent to address the disruption surrounding them. And they’ve come out as stronger powerhouses of innovation as a result. In fact, nearly half of SMB leaders maintained high confidence throughout 2025’s economic shocks – underscoring that their approach wasn’t just different, it was more resilient.

    In order to drive sustained growth in a turbulent world, more companies will need to start thinking “small” in 2026 – moving away from viewing talent as a large cost to manage and toward unlocking the multiplier effect of people and AI. Based on what worked for high-performing SMBs this year, here is the 2026 playbook leaders should follow to drive durable growth:

    Leverage AI as a force multiplier, not a replacement

    In 2026, more companies will move beyond AI adoption to fully enable AI workflows. For example, marketing teams will use generative AI to draft campaigns, while humans review for brand voice and creative iterations. Or an AI agent might triage procurement approvals, freeing finance teams to focus on strategy– a realistic scenario, since the number of SMB leaders planning to pursue AI agent expansion increased by 12 percentage points this year. The bottom line: AI will enable teams to do more, without necessarily bringing on more people.

    Tap into the power of experimentation

    If anything is certain, it’s that nothing is certain. Business leaders may not be able to predict what comes next in a volatile macroenvironment, but they can embody and cultivate the mindset that allows for success in any event. Whether it’s running rapid AI pilot projects, testing new customer experience models, or redesigning team structures, the strongest leaders will adapt through continuous and measurable experimentation– and learn from, rather than avoid, what isn’t working. Smaller organizations have the edge here. They can pivot faster, bringing their people along using change management best practices that take their larger peers months to execute. This approach allows businesses to anticipate and effectively meet the needs of a changing market as well, as 60% of SMBs that have embedded experimentation into their culture report they drove “excellent” customer satisfaction outcomes in 2025.


  • The typical American plan to study for 22 years and work for 40 ‘is broken,’ VC CEO says. Thanks to AI, employees can’t coast after graduation anymore

    Hemant Taneja, CEO and managing director of General Catalyst. · Fortune · Bridget Bennett—Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Top consulting and venture capital leaders say the idea learning ends after college is outdated in today’s AI-driven economy.

    While many assume formal learning is limited to a bachelor’s or master’s degree, both the CEO of VC firm General Catalyst, Hemant Taneja, and McKinsey’s top executive, Bob Sternfels, say that’s not the case anymore.

    Employees must skill and re-skill constantly to stay afloat, said Taneja, whose VC firm has invested in companies such as Anduril and Anthropic. Taneja discussed this during  a live taping of the All-In podcast, hosted by entrepreneur and investor Jason Calacanis Tuesday at CES 2026, a massive annual tech trade show in Las Vegas.

    “This idea that we spend 22 years learning and then 40 years working is broken,” Taneja said.

    Yet, in a workplace where AI agents can be trained quicker than employees, workers don’t only need knowledge, they must find ways to stay relevant, said host Calacanis, who himself made early investments in trading app Robinhood and Uber.

    “You’re going to have to show chutzpah, drive, passion,” he said.

    McKinsey’s global managing partner, Sternfels, said he’s seen first-hand how AI is transforming the workplace. McKinsey has used the tech to grow client-facing consultant roles by 25%, simultaneously cut the same number of jobs in non-client-facing roles, all the while increasing its output 10% overall.

    McKinsey will have just as many AI agents as it has human employees by the end of the year, Sternfels said. Currently, its human employees outnumber AI agents 40,000 to 25,000.

    “Our model has always been synonymous that growth only occurs with total head count growth. Now it’s actually splitting,” Sternfels said. “We can grow in this part, the client-facing side, and we can shrink in this part and have aggregate growth in total.”

    AI job anxiety

    McKinsey’s stark results from incorporating AI agents play to the heart of workers’ fear about how AI will disrupt their jobs as adoption increases. Some could argue young workers have a right to worry.

    A study by the Stanford University Digital Economy Lab in November found early career workers between the ages of 22 to 25 in occupations at most risk of disruption have experienced a 13% relative decline in employment levels since 2022, when OpenAI released ChatGPT. Another study by Gallup from last year found 37% of workers claimed their workplace had implemented AI.

    As Sternfels and Taneja said, the added pressure of AI means learning and evolving is more essential than ever. Yet, some have pushed back on the idea that more AI means entry-level workers don’t matter.


  • Why enterprise AI pilots fail

    CIO Dive · aleksandarvelasevic via Getty Images

    This story was originally published on CIO Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily CIO Dive newsletter.

    Eye-popping data has painted a bleak picture of IT leaders’ ability to run successful AI pilots.

    MIT found 95% of generative AI pilots fail despite ambitious enterprise expectations of rapid technology deployment. In a McKinsey survey, nearly 66% of respondents said their companies had not yet begun scaling AI enterprisewide. Indeed, many companies have been stuck in an AI pilot purgatory, some hitting a wall with generative AI last year.

    To Bret Greenstein, chief AI officer at consultancy West Monroe, companies that can’t successfully get past the pilot stage can generally be sorted into one of four groups:

    1. those that tried to scale without a transformation plan

    2. those with IT teams that did not engage other departments

    3. those with employees resistant to AI

    4. those that didn’t communicate or show the potential for value creation

    Similar profiles have materialized during previous technological shifts such as the early days of cloud. Today, there’s one key difference.

    “AI touches every role,” Greenstein said.  

    Avoiding failure

    Responsibility for solving AI pilots lands on technology teams, as complex data processing requirements block broad adoption and data governance moves to the top of priority lists. Technology chiefs must also solve data security before scaling can begin. But technical issues aren’t the only, nor are they necessarily the biggest, obstacles to getting through an AI pilot. 

    Success relies on users across all departments.

    “You need business every step of the way, especially when it comes to testing,” said Greg Beltzer, Salesforce’s chief customer officer for AI and Agentforce. “... It's not your traditional DevOps model.”

    At travel platform Engine, executives are mindful about how they talk about the “why” behind its AI tools, said Demetri Salvaggio, VP of customer experience and operations. The company has a long-standing AI partnership with Salesforce and was one of its first Agentforce platform customers.  A culture of experimentation allowed the company to buck the trend of pilot stagnation.

    Transparency and openness helped keep Engine out of Greenstein’s first three groups, as leaders were able to engage employees and quell early fears about job replacement. Joshua Stern, director of GTM systems at Engine, noted that creating a “psychological safety net” around AI encourages employees to play around with agents and share their discoveries with each other.




McKinsey and General Catalyst execs say the era of ‘learn once, work forever’ is over