WiseTech Global is slashing close to a third of its global workforce as founder Richard White pushes a dramatic pivot toward artificial intelligence — a move that will affect roughly 1,000 employees and reshape the logistics software giant from the inside out.
The Big Reset: Why WiseTech Is Cutting Deep to Bet on AI
You don’t often see a company of WiseTech’s size announce a headcount reduction this steep without an immediate crisis on its hands. But on May 29, 2026, that’s exactly what landed in inboxes across the logistics software world. The Australian firm said it’s eliminating nearly 30% of its workforce — roughly 1,000 jobs — as it restructures to put artificial intelligence at the centre of everything it does.
The cuts won’t be a quiet trim around the edges. They’ll sweep through back-office functions, operational support and legacy teams that the company says no longer fit a business that wants to move at the speed of machine learning. At the same time, WiseTech plans to create new roles in AI development, data engineering and product innovation — though it’s hard to imagine the net number will land anywhere near the old headcount.
Richard White Steps Back Into the Spotlight
No one can accuse Richard White of tiptoeing back into the executive chair. The WiseTech founder, who returned to an active leadership role as executive chairman earlier this year after the sudden resignation of the previous CEO, is now steering the company through its most aggressive transformation yet. In a statement, White made it clear these aren’t just cost-saving measures — they’re an existential repositioning.
“We’re taking the necessary steps to make sure WiseTech is built for the AI era, and that means being leaner, faster and far more focused,” White said, adding that some of the decisions were personally difficult. He didn’t sugarcoat the impact on staff, acknowledging the “real human cost” while stressing the need to secure the company’s long-term trajectory.
What’s Really Driving the 30% Reduction
Look beyond the headline number and you’ll find a company drawing a line between its past as a logistics software consolidator and its future as what White calls an “AI-first platform.” The parts of the business being hollowed out are often the ones that deal with repetitive data entry, manual compliance checks and middleware maintenance — precisely the kind of tasks that modern AI tools are starting to swallow whole.
WiseTech’s flagship product, CargoWise, already handles a massive volume of global freight data. The bet now is that embedding generative AI and predictive models deeper into that ecosystem can automate chunks of the workflow that used to require squadrons of human operators. Analysts note that while the company remains highly profitable, margins had been under scrutiny, and this restructuring could be as much about efficiency as it is about reinvention.
The Human Side of the Equation
Cutting 1,000 people is never just a spreadsheet exercise. Staff were informed through a mix of town halls and direct conversations, and the company said it would offer separation packages, career transition support and access to counselling services. Unions have already raised concerns about the speed and scale of the cuts, though WiseTech insists the timeline will vary by region and legal requirements.
Employees in North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific are all expected to be affected, with the deepest reductions hitting roles that duplicate efforts across multiple offices — a legacy of the company’s rapid acquisition spree in the late 2010s and early 2020s. White’s team believes a flatter structure will let the remaining workforce collaborate more directly with the AI tools being built internally.
Where the Savings Go
WiseTech isn’t simply pocketing the cash. The company has earmarked a significant portion of the savings to accelerate its AI research division and double down on product features that can predict supply chain disruptions, optimise routing in real time and automate customs documentation. White has often spoken about logistics as “a data problem waiting to be solved,” and now the board appears willing to back that vision with a much smaller, more specialised payroll.
The move also sends a signal to investors who have watched logistics tech peers pour billions into AI infrastructure. By freeing up capital and talent, WiseTech hopes to leapfrog competitors that are still wrestling with hybrid human-machine workflows. Whether the gamble pays off will depend on execution — and on whether the remaining teams can deliver the kind of breakthroughs the company has promised.
A Defining Moment for Australian Tech
WiseTech’s pivot lands at a time when the broader Australian tech sector is wrestling with its own identity — torn between the safe, profitable software model of the past and the high-risk, high-reward AI bets that dominate conversations from Sydney to Silicon Valley. If White’s plan works, it could become a template for how legacy SaaS companies reinvent themselves without waiting for a downturn to force their hand. If it stumbles, the 30% cut will be remembered as a painful misstep in a company that once prided itself on slow, steady growth.
For now, all eyes are on the next quarterly update. The job losses will start showing up in the books within months, but the real test — whether WiseTech can truly become an AI-driven logistics powerhouse — will take years to measure.
Originally published on joc.com by . This version has been rewritten for freshness and readability.




