Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), India’s largest IT services company, has announced plans to lay off 12,261 employees — approximately 2% of its global workforce — marking the most significant downsizing in its history. The decision, which will mainly affect middle and senior-level professionals, is part of TCS’s strategic transition into a “future-ready” organization with a stronger emphasis on artificial intelligence (AI), automation, and operational efficiency.
TCS, a flagship company of the Tata Group, had over 6.13 lakh employees globally as of June 30, 2025. Ironically, the company had added 5,000 employees in the April–June quarter. Yet, faced with rapid technological shifts and client demands for reduced costs, TCS is choosing to rebalance its workforce rather than expand it further.
AI and Skill Mismatch at the Core of the Restructuring
While many speculated that artificial intelligence is directly replacing human jobs, TCS CEO K Krithivasan clarified that the layoffs are not purely driven by AI gains. “This is not because AI is delivering 20% productivity gains,” he said in a statement to Moneycontrol. “This is about the feasibility of deployment and where there is a skill mismatch.”
Nevertheless, the company’s internal communication and strategic planning acknowledge AI’s growing role in changing delivery models. The move comes 30 months after the launch of ChatGPT, which has redefined expectations around human productivity, coding automation, and service delivery across the global IT sector.
Financial Market Response: TCS Share Price Drops
Following the announcement, TCS share price dropped by nearly 2%, hitting ₹3,081.20 on the BSE, making it one of the biggest losers on the Nifty IT Index, which also saw a 1.6% dip. Peers like Infosys and Wipro also recorded over 1% decline each, reflecting sector-wide investor anxiety. The market sentiment reflects mounting concerns over mass layoffs, rising attrition rates, cost-cutting measures, and an increasingly volatile global demand environment.
TCS stock performance over the past year has been underwhelming — down 10% in one month, 23% over six months, and 30% in one year. In comparison, the broader Nifty 50 index has shown more resilience. This lagging performance adds to investor concerns about how well TCS is managing the transition to an AI-dominated future.
The company’s recent Q1 FY26 financial results reported a 4.38% rise in net profit (₹12,760 crore) but a 1.6% drop in consolidated revenue, down to ₹63,437 crore. Revenue in dollar terms fell 0.6%, suggesting softness in international markets. These figures highlight tightening margins, reduced deal sizes, and growing pressure from clients seeking 20–30% price reductions—especially in light of AI-driven productivity expectations.
Strategic Shift Toward Becoming “Future-Ready”
TCS has framed this layoff as part of a broader initiative to become a “future-ready” enterprise. This includes:
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Deploying AI across client and internal operations
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Entering new international markets
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Building next-gen digital infrastructure
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Deepening partner ecosystems
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Redesigning the workforce strategy to prioritize younger, AI-literate talent
“We are committed to supporting affected colleagues through this transition and thank them for their service,” Krithivasan stated in an internal email.
Industry Trend: AI Disruption Drives Job Cuts
This move by TCS is not isolated. Industry-wide, IT companies are facing the pressure of transitioning to AI-driven models, pushing many firms to reduce dependency on mid- and senior-level manpower. According to Phil Fersht, CEO of HFS Research, the rise of services-as-software is forcing firms to cut costs by reducing high-salary roles and retraining younger employees to work with AI.
Other Tata Group firms like Tata Motors and Tata Steel have also undergone workforce rationalizations in the past, aiming to enhance profitability and respond to market realities.
What Lies Ahead?
While the job cuts are concerning for many employees, TCS insists it is not reducing headcount due to redundancy but rather aiming to reskill and redeploy talent wherever possible. However, the reality remains that 12,261 employees will be impacted, most of them in India and a few in global locations.
As the company marches toward AI-driven innovation and cost efficiency, this layoff is expected to be the beginning of a new era in Indian IT services — one where adaptability, upskilling, and agility will decide the fate of professionals.