September 26, 2025 – Global IT consulting giant Accenture has confirmed that over 11,000 employees have been laid off in recent months as part of its ongoing $865 million restructuring programme. The move comes as the company ramps up its investments in artificial intelligence while facing weaker growth expectations.
AI Push Reshapes Workforce
Accenture revealed that the layoffs were driven by its rapid shift toward AI-driven services. With client demand increasingly focused on AI-enabled solutions, the company said it is prioritising skills in these areas over roles where reskilling was deemed unfeasible.
“We’re making difficult choices on a compressed timeline. For areas where reskilling doesn’t provide a path forward, we are exiting roles to make room for the skills our clients now demand,” CEO Julie Sweet told analysts during an earnings call.
Numbers at a Glance
- Workforce at end-August 2025: 7,79,000 employees
- Down from: 7,91,000 employees three months earlier
- Layoffs: Around 11,000 so far, with cuts expected to continue until November 2025
- Restructuring cost: $865 million, mainly covering severance payouts
- Projected savings: Over $1 billion once the programme is complete
The Bigger Picture
The company said its restructuring reflects both shifting client needs and the impact of a federal spending slowdown, which has dampened corporate demand. Despite the cuts, Accenture highlighted that revenue rose 7% in Q4, buoyed by increasing demand for AI-led solutions.
Looking ahead, Accenture also announced plans to retrain part of its workforce in agentic AI technologies, signalling that while traditional roles are being phased out, new opportunities in advanced AI services are being created.
What It Means for the IT Sector
Accenture’s layoffs underscore a broader trend across global IT services — where automation and AI adoption are reshaping workforces. While cost savings and efficiency gains are clear, the transition is putting pressure on thousands of employees whose roles are being replaced or transformed.
Bottom Line
With 11,000 jobs already cut and more reductions likely in the near term, Accenture’s restructuring shows how AI disruption is no longer a distant threat but a present reality for the IT workforce. At the same time, the company’s bet on AI positions it strongly to capture future growth, even as the human cost remains high.





