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Salesforce down 32% for not firing

3 min read
12:41UTC

Marc Benioff told investors on 27 May that Salesforce headcount has stayed near 83,000 and 'mostly flat for two years', adding 'we are not hiring more engineers' as Agentforce crossed $1.2 billion in recurring revenue.

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Key takeaway

Salesforce trades at a 32% discount for not firing while running the same AI playbook as rewarded rivals.

Marc Benioff told investors on 27 May that Salesforce headcount has stayed near 83,000 and 'mostly flat for two years', adding 'we are not hiring more engineers' 1. Agentforce, Salesforce's AI agent product, crossed $1.2 billion in annual recurring revenue (ARR, the run-rate of subscription income), up from the $800 million reported in late April . Days later Aneel Bhusri, chief executive of Workday, said he would 'keep headcount as close to flat as possible' at roughly 20,800 staff, citing his own AI tools 2.

The market reaction split the field along a single line. Cloudflare was rewarded after cutting 1,100 jobs on record revenue , and CBOE hit a record share price the day it cut 20% of staff . Salesforce, running the same AI playbook but declining to fire, sits down 32% for 2026. Investors appear to price declared cuts as a discipline signal and efficiency-without-firing as weakness.

That read deserves a caveat stated plainly. Salesforce's 32% drop may be ordinary software-sector multiple compression from rates and a growth scare, not a specific penalty for refusing to fire. Treat this as an emerging market signal, not a proven law. The direction holds across independent first-party evidence: Benioff's own quote, Bhusri's flat-headcount pledge, and the fact that only one major firm in the late-May cluster is still growing staff.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Salesforce and Workday are two of the biggest companies that make software used by businesses worldwide. Both said in the same week that they are not planning to hire more staff, even though their businesses are growing. Normally, a growing company hires more people. But both said AI tools can do much of the work new hires would have done. Salesforce's AI product alone is now earning more than $1 billion a year. The stock market punished Salesforce for this choice, dropping its share price by 32% so far in 2026. Investors preferred companies that went further and actually cut staff, which reduces costs more visibly. The tension: holding headcount flat is a bet that AI will eventually deliver productivity that investors can see in profit margins.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Agentforce crossing $1.2 billion ARR means AI agent revenue now offsets the marginal cost of roughly 5,000 to 7,000 software engineers at Salesforce's salary band. The economic logic to freeze hiring does not require a board decision: it follows automatically from the unit economics once AI agent output exceeds human marginal cost per task.

A measurement lag drives the market reward asymmetry. Outright cuts show in the next quarter's payroll line, giving investors a concrete figure. Salesforce's flat headcount does not appear in margins for a full fiscal year, so Wall Street prices the certainty of cash it can see over the strategy it cannot yet measure.

Escalation

The flat-headcount stance is stable in the short term but structurally under pressure: if competitors who cut actively outperform on margins, Salesforce and Workday face board-level pressure to follow. The 32% share decline is a leading indicator of that pressure.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Two of the five largest enterprise software companies by market cap have formalised flat-headcount-as-policy; smaller software companies will treat this as permission to do the same without announcing cuts.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Graduate hiring in enterprise software collapses without any WARN Act trigger, since no existing role is eliminated.

    Medium term · Reported
  • Consequence

    Market pressure on Salesforce (down 32%) may force active cuts within two to three earnings cycles, converting a flat-headcount posture into an outright reduction.

    Medium term · Reported
First Reported In

Update #11 · Markets now reward the cut, punish the freeze

Motley Fool· 1 Jun 2026
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