Groupon is cutting up to 400 jobs globally as the company pivots toward becoming an AI-native business. Investors pushed the stock price higher following the restructuring announcement.
Groupon is making another dramatic shift — and this time, artificial intelligence is at the center of it all.
The longtime deal-and-discount platform announced plans to eliminate up to 400 jobs globally as part of a sweeping restructuring effort aimed at transforming the company into what executives describe as an “AI-native” business. The move immediately caught Wall Street’s attention, sending Groupon’s stock price higher as investors reacted positively to the company’s automation strategy.
According to a recent filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Groupon’s board approved the restructuring plan last week. The layoffs will impact both full-time employees and contractors, with the cuts expected to continue through the third quarter of 2026.
For many workers, however, the announcement represents another painful chapter in the tech industry’s ongoing shift toward automation-first operations.
Groupon’s Reinvention Strategy
Groupon became one of the biggest names in e-commerce during the early 2010s by offering flash deals on restaurants, travel, spas, and local experiences. At its peak, the company symbolized the rise of online coupon culture and local digital commerce.
But the market changed quickly.
Competition intensified. Consumer habits evolved. Mobile shopping disrupted the original daily-deal model. Over time, Groupon struggled to maintain the explosive growth that once made it a tech darling.
Now, leadership believes artificial intelligence could help modernize the business while reducing operational costs.
The restructuring effort appears focused on automating internal systems, improving personalization, streamlining customer service, and optimizing marketing operations. While the company has not publicly outlined every department affected, the filing suggests the layoffs are tied directly to broader automation and efficiency goals.
Why Investors Reacted Positively
Despite the scale of the layoffs, investors viewed the move as a sign Groupon is aggressively cutting expenses and repositioning itself for long-term profitability.
In today’s tech market, companies that present themselves as AI-driven often receive favorable reactions from investors who see automation as a path to faster growth and leaner operations.
That trend has played out repeatedly across Silicon Valley during the last two years. Businesses ranging from software firms to media companies have reduced headcounts while simultaneously investing heavily in AI infrastructure.
For public companies under pressure to improve margins, automation is increasingly becoming part of the financial playbook.
The Bigger Tech Industry Trend
Groupon’s announcement is not happening in isolation.
Across the technology sector, companies are restructuring around AI capabilities at an accelerating pace. Customer support, coding assistance, marketing analytics, data processing, and content operations are all areas where AI tools are rapidly replacing or reshaping traditional workflows.
Executives often frame these moves as modernization efforts. Critics argue they are also becoming a convenient justification for workforce reductions.
Either way, the industry trend is clear: businesses are prioritizing automation faster than many workers anticipated.
What Happens Next for Groupon?
The restructuring plan is expected to continue into 2027, meaning additional operational changes could still be ahead.
Whether the pivot succeeds may depend on Groupon’s ability to prove it can remain relevant in a highly competitive digital marketplace. The company still has strong consumer recognition, but it faces pressure from newer platforms, evolving shopping behavior, and changing advertiser expectations.
AI may help Groupon operate more efficiently. The larger question is whether efficiency alone can reignite meaningful growth.
For now, Wall Street appears optimistic. Employees facing uncertainty may feel very differently.