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As the dust settles on the SaaS hiring boom, a new growth mantra is taking hold: automate before you augment the workforce.
SaaS startups are hitting pause on large-scale hiring and redirecting budgets into AI tools—from copilots to internal agents—hoping to unlock productivity without bloating headcount.
“We’re rethinking how we work…It’s not fewer people just to cut costs, it’s about designing orgs around people + AI,” says Arvind Parthiban of SuperOps.
Others, like Atomicwork, call it the "Uber AI Mode"—investing 20% of hiring budgets into AI that delivers returns within a year.
Founders argue that AI now offers a better ROI than hiring more employees. Investors are backing this shift too.
“AI tools cost $20–$40 per person per month,” says Upekkha’s Prasanna Krishnamoorthy. “Hiring adds friction. AI adds velocity.”
Startups are now reserving 10–20% of their software budgets just for AI experiments, aiming for higher revenue per employee, greater margins, and future-proof organisations.
Fireside Ventures is burning steady with a new fund that sticks to its winning size.
Fireside Ventures’ Fund IV stays the course at $230 million, but with a sharper international edge.
While domestic LPs remain core, Fireside is now actively courting global backers looking to tap into India’s consumption boom.
Since its launch in 2017, the Bengaluru-based VC firm has backed 53 brands, including Yoga Bar, The Sleep Company, and The Whole Truth, and now manages assets worth over Rs 3,000 crore.
Fireside joins a growing list of firms raising fresh capital amid a surge in dry powder and renewed investor interest.
While A91 and Bessemer have increased their fund sizes, Fireside and Accel have opted for consistency.
No more extensions, no more workarounds.
India is tightening the screws on the Closed-Circuit Television (CCTV) camera industry with mandatory certification requirements—putting hundreds of MSMEs and Chinese-dependent players on shaky ground.
On April 21, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) refused to grant any further deadline extensions for obtaining certification from the Standardisation Testing and Quality Certification for CCTV components.
Experts say over 80% of CCTV products in India rely on Chinese components. While countries like the US have banned the use of Chinese CCTVs, India has taken a unique approach by requiring certification for such items.
The Federation of All India IT Associations (FAIITA) has warned that more than 1,000 MSMEs and around 4 lakh jobs could be at risk.
Analysts say the shift opens up opportunities for non-Chinese chipmakers like Realtek and Novatek to expand in India.
They built it. They profited. Now they watch it burn.
From the creator of Succession comes Mountainhead, a darkly comedic look at what happens when four tech billionaires – Steve Carell, Jason Schwartzman, Ramy Youssef, and Cory Michael Smith – attempt a getaway just as the world outside starts to implode.
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