The Cloudflare announcement was made on a Wednesday, which is the type of midweek time that businesses seem to favor when they want news to spread swiftly. Together, the numbers were odd. $639.8 million in revenue, a 34% increase over the previous year. In fact, the net loss had increased. Then, practically simultaneously, the business informed over 1,100 employees that they would not be returning. Even though Cloudflare claims there isn’t a contradiction, it’s difficult to ignore it.
The news was shared on the company blog by Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn, who co-founded this business over a period of more than fifteen years. The wording was cautious, almost philosophical. They wrote that there has been a significant shift in how they operate. In just the last three months, Cloudflare’s internal use of AI has increased by more than 600%. Every day, thousands of agent sessions are managed by staff members in engineering, human resources, finance, and marketing. That is the official narrative, and it is most likely partially accurate. It’s another matter entirely if it’s the whole truth.
| Company Profile | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Cloudflare, Inc. |
| Founded | 2009 |
| Co-Founders | Matthew Prince, Michelle Zatlyn, Lee Holloway |
| Headquarters | San Francisco, California, United States |
| Industry | Internet infrastructure, cybersecurity, edge computing |
| Stock Ticker | NET (NYSE) |
| Q1 FY2026 Revenue | $639.8 million (up 34% year-over-year) |
| Q1 FY2026 Net Loss | $62 million |
| Employees (end of 2025) | 5,156 full-time |
| Layoffs Announced | More than 1,100 employees (~20% of workforce) |
| Restructuring Charges | $140 million to $150 million |
| Announcement Date | May 7, 2026 |
| CEO Quote Source | Joint blog post by Matthew Prince and Michelle Zatlyn |
Investors weren’t persuaded. In the days following the announcement, the stock fell about 23%, which is not a beat but rather the kind of decline that typically follows a missed quarter. The market seems to be beginning to view announcements about AI restructuring more skeptically. Saying “AI is making us more efficient” might have been sufficient a few years ago. After years of aggressive hiring, it now seems to some like a more tidy explanation of what would otherwise be called a correction.
The optics are challenging. During the earnings call, Prince stated that he anticipates Cloudflare having more workers in 2027 than at any other time in 2026. Thus, the business is hiring later and making cuts now. That could be a tactic. Perhaps it’s the inevitable rhythm of a company attempting to reorganize itself around tools that weren’t available when many of those 5,156 jobs were created. In any case, the framing has a slightly clinical quality. Workflows are not people.
This spring, as you stroll through the larger tech scene, the pattern begins to become recognizable. In the same breath, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, xAI, and Coinbase all announced layoffs and made references to artificial intelligence. The script has begun to rhyme, despite the companies’ disparate sizes and shapes. high income. fewer chairs. A future-oriented blog post. Somewhere along the line, AI moved from being a product story to being a personnel story, and not many CEOs have figured out how to talk about that cleanly.

The company’s position within the internet itself is what makes Cloudflare’s case intriguing. It is located in the plumbing system. Its servers are used by millions of websites, which rely on its security and uptime. When a company like that says it can run leaner because of AI agents, other companies pay attention. Startups will study this. Boards will ask whether they should do the same. The Cloudflare layoffs may end up shaping how the next round of decisions gets made across the industry, regardless of whether the original logic holds up.
It’s still unclear whether the productivity gains will be as durable as Prince suggests. AI is capable of writing, summarizing, coding, and reviewing. It still cannot own a customer relationship or sit through a tense negotiation. The next few quarters will tell us whether this was a disciplined early move or a fashionable wrapper around something less elegant. For now, 1,100 people are figuring out what comes next, and the rest of the industry is watching with a mix of curiosity, worry, and quiet calculation.
