DeepL cuts a quarter of its staff amid the AI revolution in translation
DeepL, the German rival to Google Translate, announced a 25% workforce reduction. According to CEO Jarek Kutylowski, the decision was driven by a “massive struc

DeepL, a German startup known for its high-tech approach to machine translation and fierce competition with Google, announced a 25% workforce reduction. This decision became a response to radical changes in the industry and competition.
What happened
CEO Jarek Kutylowski explained the cuts with words about a "massive structural shift" in the industry due to the explosive development of artificial intelligence. He emphasized that the translation function is becoming an increasingly non-differentiating factor, as large language models (LLMs) are getting better at handling this task. DeepL built its business on the core of highest-quality translations and managed to win the loyalty of professionals in the translation industry. But now this function is being embedded in broader AI systems. Competition comes not only from Google Translate, but also from OpenAI ChatGPT, Claude from Anthropic, Gemini from Google — all these systems can translate and do it pretty well.
Transition to a new model
The workforce reduction indicates that DeepL is radically changing its strategy. Instead of competing in the narrow market of specialized translation, the company is likely focusing on integration into larger ecosystems and development of new services. Leadership has several options on the table:
- Integration into browsers, messengers, IDEs and other popular platforms
- Enterprise solutions for content and software localization
- Specialized models for verticals (law, medicine, technical documentation)
- Powerful API for developers who embed translation in their applications
- Mobile applications with extended functionality (for example, real-time video translation)
Broader trend
DeepL's story reflects a more general transformation in the AI industry. Companies that built a specialized tool (OpenAI Whisper for speech, various LLM startups for text) are forced to either integrate into ecosystems of major players, or find narrow niches where their expertise remains valuable and impossible to copy.
"This is the first in a chain of examples of such companies that are
losing their differentiating advantage in the face of a new generation of generative AI systems," analysts say.
What it means
DeepL faced a challenge that awaits many AI companies in the coming years: how to remain relevant and profitable when a basic function becomes commoditized. The 25% workforce reduction is an acknowledgment that the old business model no longer works. The company is making a difficult choice between deep specialization and participation in a broader AI movement.