Workforce Watch: February 2026
- Brittany Perry
- 2 days ago
- 2 min read

Each month brings new signals about where the workforce — and workplace strategy — is headed. February was no exception. Across multiple industries, companies continued to recalibrate headcount, reinforce return-to-office (RTO) expectations, and quietly manage ongoing turnover.
Major Layoffs Announced in February:
Technology & Software
Block (Square, Cash App) — announced plans to cut about 4,000 employees as AI-driven efficiency allows smaller teams.
eBay — cutting roughly 800 jobs (≈6% of workforce) as part of restructuring.
WiseTech Global — planning about 2,000 job cuts tied to AI integration.
Salesforce — reportedly cut fewer than 1,000 roles across multiple teams.
Workday — layoffs affecting roughly 2% of workforce as resources are realigned.
Palo Alto Networks / CyberArk — about 500 employees laid off after acquisition overlap.
xAI — workforce reduction during reorganization (exact number undisclosed).
Media
The Washington Post — about 300 employees laid off amid financial losses and declining traffic.
Retail, Logistics & Consumer
Target — eliminating about 500 corporate and supply chain roles while shifting investment to stores.
UPS — broader downsizing includes plans that could eliminate up to 30,000 jobs, alongside buyout offers.
Other Notable Workforce Reductions
Maersk — planning roughly 1,000 administrative job cuts amid cost pressures.
Commonwealth Bank — cutting about 300 roles as part of AI-driven changes.
What February’s workforce activity makes clear is this: employee movement is not episodic — it’s continuous.
Organizations that treat IT asset retrieval as an afterthought often find themselves reacting instead of controlling the process.
An efficient IT retrieval strategy helps companies:
Recover devices quickly and consistently
Maintain accurate asset visibility
Reduce unnecessary hardware purchases
Protect sensitive data during offboarding
Accelerate readiness for incoming hires
As workforce dynamics continue to shift month by month, the companies that stay ahead will be the ones that have built repeatable, scalable offboarding infrastructure — not just ad-hoc processes.


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