During mass layoffs, a specific type of corporate language emerges. terms like “streamline,” “complexity,” and “key bets.” In his email to employees on May 20, Intuit CEO Sasan Goodarzi used them all to notify about 3,000 workers that their positions would be eliminated. 17% of the company’s worldwide workforce. Absent. Additionally, the stock fell by almost 5% that morning, which was somewhat more truthful than the memo.
In particular, 772 employees are affected by the Intuit California Nevada layoffs, which were divided between two WARN Act filings that were submitted to state authorities on the same day that the internal email was received. There are 162 in Nevada and 493 in California. The financial services division that Intuit purchased in 2020, Credit Karma, filed a separate WARN notice for 117 additional Oakland employees. These filings satisfied the WARN Act’s requirement that employers provide 60 days’ notice before significant terminations. The human weight behind those figures—the Reno residents who now pass an office that will no longer require them—was something they were unable to convey.

It is worthwhile to take a moment to consider the Reno closure. The Nevada office, located at 6888 Sierra Center Parkway, is being completely closed as part of Intuit’s efforts to streamline operations into what it refers to as “key hubs.” Additionally, the Woodland Hills location in the Los Angeles region is closing. It’s the kind of geographic reorganization that rarely makes the front page but transforms entire neighborhoods, including the local economy that calibrated around a consistent payroll, the nearby lunch spots, and the apartment buildings that filled up when a tech campus opened.
All of this was presented as forward momentum in Goodarzi’s email. He claimed that the layoffs would enable Intuit to concentrate more on artificial intelligence, an area in which the company has been making significant investments. In order to incorporate their models into TurboTax, QuickBooks, and other platforms, it has multi-year contracts with both Anthropic and OpenAI. There’s a logic to it: the headcount calculation shifts if AI can perform tasks that previously required teams of engineers or support personnel. It’s unclear if the efficiency gains are absorbed somewhere else or if the math works out as the press releases indicate.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that this specific framing isn’t unique to Intuit. The list of businesses that have announced layoffs this year, citing AI as both the cause and the solution, has gotten long enough to point to a pattern: Block, Amazon, Pinterest. The layoffs at Intuit fit neatly into that pattern. It’s probably worthwhile to consider whether that’s due to industry groupthink or strategic clarity.
The impacted workers in California and Nevada are dealing with a situation that the CEO’s email skipped over. The last day of employment for affected American workers is July 31. They will receive 16 weeks of base pay plus two extra weeks for each year they worked for the company. This severance package is less consoling than continuing employment but more generous than many tech layoffs. The 117 workers at Credit Karma in Oakland deal with the same schedule, the same uncertainty, and the same challenge of figuring out what to do in a labor market that is changing due to the same technology that recently cost them their jobs.
Intuit might become leaner and actually more productive. The market’s initial negative reaction may subside as investors consider the longer-term AI integration strategy. The company reported earnings on the same day the memo was leaked. However, the layoffs at Intuit California and Nevada also serve as a reminder that announcements about restructurings and their actual implementation fall into quite different categories. A press release is obtained. A WARN notice is sent to the other.
