Tech CEO lays off 80% of workforce after employees refused to adopt AI

Tech CEO lays off 80% of workforce after employees refused to adopt AI

IgniteTech's Eric Vaughan cut nearly four-fifths of his staff over AI resistance, then watched margins climb to 75%

When your boss asks you to learn a new tool, most people grumble and open a YouTube tutorial. At IgniteTech, a significant chunk of the workforce chose a different path: they simply refused. CEO Eric Vaughan responded by showing nearly 80% of them the door.

What happened at IgniteTech

In early 2023, Vaughan mandated a company-wide transition toward artificial intelligence. IgniteTech allocated 20% of its payroll specifically toward AI training initiatives, including a recurring program called “AI Mondays” designed to get teams up to speed on generative AI tools.

The reception was, to put it mildly, not warm. Vaughan later described the resistance as including “flat-out” refusals from employees, with particular pushback coming from technical staff. He even flagged concerns about sabotage risks, suggesting that some employees weren’t just passively ignoring the mandate but actively working against it.

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Within roughly a year, nearly 80% of the workforce had been replaced. Not reassigned. Not put on performance improvement plans. Replaced.

The numbers that followed

By the end of 2024, IgniteTech reported nearly 75% EBITDA margins while sustaining nine-figure revenues. Most enterprise software companies would consider margins in the 30-40% range respectable.

The leaner organization also managed to ship new products, including an AI tool called Eloquens AI. And by early 2025, IgniteTech completed the acquisition of Khoros, a customer engagement platform.

Vaughan reflected on the difficulty of the layoffs but stopped well short of regret. His takeaway was that he should have moved faster. In his telling, the hesitation cost time, not the decision itself.

A broader pattern of resistance

IgniteTech’s internal revolt wasn’t an isolated incident. Surveys conducted during this period indicate a significant level of employee resistance to AI implementations across the technology industry more broadly. Some workers feared job displacement. Others questioned the reliability of AI tools. This resistance has taken various forms across companies, ranging from quiet non-compliance to outright sabotage of AI-driven initiatives.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Tech CEO lays off 80% of workforce after employees refused to adopt AI

Tech CEO lays off 80% of workforce after employees refused to adopt AI

IgniteTech's Eric Vaughan cut nearly four-fifths of his staff over AI resistance, then watched margins climb to 75%

When your boss asks you to learn a new tool, most people grumble and open a YouTube tutorial. At IgniteTech, a significant chunk of the workforce chose a different path: they simply refused. CEO Eric Vaughan responded by showing nearly 80% of them the door.

What happened at IgniteTech

In early 2023, Vaughan mandated a company-wide transition toward artificial intelligence. IgniteTech allocated 20% of its payroll specifically toward AI training initiatives, including a recurring program called “AI Mondays” designed to get teams up to speed on generative AI tools.

The reception was, to put it mildly, not warm. Vaughan later described the resistance as including “flat-out” refusals from employees, with particular pushback coming from technical staff. He even flagged concerns about sabotage risks, suggesting that some employees weren’t just passively ignoring the mandate but actively working against it.

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Within roughly a year, nearly 80% of the workforce had been replaced. Not reassigned. Not put on performance improvement plans. Replaced.

The numbers that followed

By the end of 2024, IgniteTech reported nearly 75% EBITDA margins while sustaining nine-figure revenues. Most enterprise software companies would consider margins in the 30-40% range respectable.

The leaner organization also managed to ship new products, including an AI tool called Eloquens AI. And by early 2025, IgniteTech completed the acquisition of Khoros, a customer engagement platform.

Vaughan reflected on the difficulty of the layoffs but stopped well short of regret. His takeaway was that he should have moved faster. In his telling, the hesitation cost time, not the decision itself.

A broader pattern of resistance

IgniteTech’s internal revolt wasn’t an isolated incident. Surveys conducted during this period indicate a significant level of employee resistance to AI implementations across the technology industry more broadly. Some workers feared job displacement. Others questioned the reliability of AI tools. This resistance has taken various forms across companies, ranging from quiet non-compliance to outright sabotage of AI-driven initiatives.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.