Cloudflare just delivered a message that every startup founder needs to hear — and it’s probably not the one you’d expect.
The internet security giant reported its highest quarterly revenue ever on Thursday: $639.8 million, a 34% year-over-year jump. Then it announced it was laying off roughly 1,100 people — 20% of its workforce. CEO Matthew Prince was unusually blunt about why: artificial intelligence made those jobs obsolete.
“We’ve never done something like this in Cloudflare’s history,” Prince said on the earnings call, acknowledging the first mass layoff in the company’s 16-year run. The cuts span every team and geography — with one notable exception: quota-carrying salespeople are being kept on.
The AI Tipping Point
Prince revealed that Cloudflare’s internal use of AI spiked more than 600% in the last three months alone. The tipping point came last November, when teams began reporting productivity gains of 2x, 10x, and in some cases 100x. “It was like going from a manual to an electric screwdriver,” he described.
The entire R&D team now builds on Cloudflare’s own Workers platform, including its vibe coding feature. But here’s the really striking detail: 100% of the code deployed into Cloudflare’s products is now reviewed by autonomous AI agents — not humans. From engineering to HR to finance to marketing, employees run “thousands of AI agent sessions each day.”
That massive productivity boost has a flip side. Highly efficient AI-powered workers need fewer support staff. Prince was direct about it: “A lot of the support people that provide support behind them, those roles aren’t going to be the roles that drive companies going forward.”
The Paradox of Growth
What makes Cloudflare’s move particularly striking is the context. This wasn’t a cost-cutting measure born of desperation. The company has $2.5 billion in remaining performance obligations — contracted revenue not yet delivered, up 34% year over year. Its quarterly loss grew to $62 million from $53.2 million, but as a percentage of revenue, the loss narrowed. By most measures, the business is in solid shape.
When an analyst asked why layoffs were necessary after such a strong quarter, Prince’s answer was telling: “Just because you’re fit doesn’t mean you can’t get fitter.”
And Cloudflare plans to keep hiring — Prince said he expects headcount in 2027 to surpass any point in 2026. The people they want are the ones embracing AI tools.
A Pattern Taking Shape
Cloudflare’s story is becoming familiar. Meta, Microsoft, and Amazon have all reported increased revenue alongside significant headcount reductions, citing AI as the driving force. Whether this reflects genuine structural transformation or provides convenient cover for margin expansion is up for debate — but the pattern is real, and it’s accelerating.
For startup founders, the implications are hard to overstate. If a company growing 34% annually with $2.5 billion in future revenue commitments feels compelled to restructure around AI, what does that mean for earlier-stage companies with thinner margins and less room for error?
The Takeaway for Founders
Prince put it in terms that should resonate with any founder building a team today: “Today’s actions are not a cost-cutting exercise or an assessment of individuals’ performance; they are about Cloudflare defining how a world-class, high-growth company operates and creates value in the agentic AI era.”
Three things to think about for your own startup:
1. Start eating your own dog food. Cloudflare didn’t just sell AI — it rebuilt its own operations around its platform. Your product should be making your own company more efficient, too.
2. Rethink team structure for AI-native operations. The era of hiring armies of support staff to back a lean engineering team is ending. AI agents are closing that gap fast.
3. The bar for taking funding is getting higher. If mature, high-growth companies are cutting 20% to “get fitter,” VCs are going to expect the same discipline from portfolio companies. The AI efficiency play is now table stakes, not a differentiator.
Cloudflare’s message cuts through the noise: the agentic AI era isn’t coming — it’s here, and it’s reshaping the relationship between revenue, headcount, and productivity. Founders who understand that today will be the ones building the companies of tomorrow, not cutting to survive.
Source: TechCrunch — “Cloudflare says AI made 1,100 jobs obsolete, even as revenue hit a record high”