Business Standard

Consumer internet firms brace for pay cuts, layoffs

Companies taking extreme steps to stay afloat amid Covid-19 crisis

- NEHA ALAWADHI, PEERZADA ABRAR & SAMREEN AHMAD

Consumer internet startups in India are bracing for measures like salary cuts and layoffs to mitigate the impact of losses after the nationwide lockdown to contain the spread of Covid-19. For now, Bounce, Shuttl, Fab Hotels, Instamojo, Zomato, Curefit, and Healthifym­e, among others, are going for salary deductions, according to multiple sources.

At Bounce, the Sequoiabac­ked scooter sharing startup, co-founders Vivekanand­a Hallekere, Varun Agni and Anil Giriraj are taking a 100 per cent pay cut. For others the extent of reduction would be 20-60 per cent. “Pay cuts will ensure no jobs are lost irrespecti­ve of the economic situation, and the company improves its runway to over 30 months,” Bounce said in reply to a query by Business Standard. In January, the firm had raised over $105 million. The investment had more than doubled its valuation to over $500 million, from its previous funding round last June, according to sources.

Bounce said the company would reinstate salaries as soon as the situation improves. In lieu of the interim salary cuts, employees would get ESOPS (employee stock ownership plans), so that everyone benefits from future upsides when the going gets better, it said.

Sandeep Aggarwal, founder of online car marketplac­e Droom, said employees would take a 15 per cent salary cut. “I have taken a 100 per cent cut from March 16. The salary cuts

for other staff are effective from April 1. No person has been laid off,” he said. He said, however, that as part of the annual appraisal cycle (between midFebruar­y and March), 15-30 employees were asked to leave based on performanc­e.

Similarly, in a note to its employees late last month, Makemytrip’s executive chairman Deep Kalra and group CEO Rajesh Magow had said: “(In the wake of Covid-19) We will continue to sharply reduce variable costs like advertisin­g, sales promotions and payment gateway costs, along with optimising IT infra and expenses relating to the functionin­g of our offices and other establishm­ents. On people costs front, both of us will take the lead and take zero salary effective April 2020, while the rest of our leaders have also offered to take a reduction of approximat­ely 50 per cent.”

Ixigo has also announced salary cuts across the board though the company said it would not layoff anyone for now. “To start with, the two of us (co-founders) took a decision to forego our entire salary for as long as required to get things back on track,” co-founder and CEO Aloke Bajapai said.

The company’s leadership team has also agreed to take a pay cut of more than 60 per cent based on their grade, while for the rest of the employees, cuts would vary (20-50 per cent).

Fab Hotels has said it was implementi­ng a pay cut of 15 per cent for those with salaries of less than ~25,000 a month and 20 per cent for those who are above this salary bracket, starting March. The cofounders will take a pay cut of 25 per cent. In an e-mail to employees, CEO and co-founder Vaibhav Aggarwal said that in March alone, the budget hotel room aggregator had seen a 50 per cent dip in revenues.

Instamojo is looking at downsizing 6-7 per cent of its total workforce apart from effecting 10-40 per cent pay cuts. A third of the company staff have not been considered for the pay cut and remain unaffected.

“We are expecting most of the consumer internet start-ups, unless you are in the grocery, education tech, and video conferenci­ng business, would ultimately lay-off people and cut back salaries,” said Sachin Taparia, founder and chairman of Localcircl­es. Before the coronaviru­s hit India, Localcircl­es had done a survey to gauge the mood of the consumer in 2020. Around 45 per cent of the households had said they were planning to reduce discretion­ary spending.

At well-funded companies such Ola and Swiggy, co-founders including Bhavish Aggarwal and Sriharsha Majety have taken massive salary cuts.

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