CEO Kaz Nejatian stated that the company aims to bring operational work closer to its U.S. customer base while leaning into AI to handle tasks previously requiring manual intervention. Opendoor, which operated offices in Chennai and Bengaluru, saw its non-U.S. headcount drop from 342 in 2024 to 184 by the end of last year. This reduction mirrors a broader corporate contraction, as the company’s total global workforce fell from 1,470 to 1,042 during the same period.
Despite these cuts, industry observers see the exit as a bellwether for the global business services sector. India currently hosts over 2,100 Global Capability Centers, employing 2.36 million people and generating nearly $100 billion in annual revenue. Phil Fersht, CEO of HFS Research, noted that the trend is less about relocating jobs to the U.S. and more about companies requiring significantly less operational labor overall. He describes this transition as "Services-as-Software," where firms prioritize lean workflows powered by AI rather than scaling headcount.
While some venture capitalists, including Better Tomorrow Ventures’ Sheel Mohnot, warn of potential job losses in the region, others characterize the pivot as a fundamental redesign of corporate structure. Whether this represents a permanent erosion of the cost-arbitrage model or simply a localized restructuring remains a point of contention. For now, Opendoor serves as a complex case study for companies attempting to balance financial austerity with the aggressive adoption of new automation tools.

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