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Denver-based software company Poppulo laid off 80 employees as tech industry downsizing continues

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Poppulo, a Denver-based software development company, laid off 80 employees at the end of April, including 20 workers in Colorado.

The move follows downsizing in the tech industry that started in 2022, with impacted companies including Twitter, Microsoft, Dell Technologies Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc., the owner of Facebook and Instagram. But other Colorado sectors aren’t immune to layoffs either, with the energy, cannabis and manufacturing sectors also taking blows earlier this year.

Although inflation is steadily slowing, and the U.S. isn’t in a recession yet, the economic forecast for 2023 remains shaky.

“We made the difficult decision to reduce our global workforce by approximately 12%,” said Eoin Byrne, chief people officer at Poppulo. Founded in 2011, the company specializes in communications and workplace technology.

With its headquarters at 1221 Broadway in Denver, Poppulo also maintains offices in Massachusetts, Ireland and England. Out of the laid-off employees, 53 live in the U.S., 17 in Ireland and 10 in the U.K., said spokesperson Renee Soto.

News goes viral

The layoffs caught the internet’s attention when former employee Chris Callahan took his frustrations to LinkedIn this week. He criticized leadership’s response in the aftermath of the layoffs in a post that’s since received thousands of likes and hundreds of comments.

The 35-year-old’s start as an account executive at the company began last September, with excitement about his manager and the product, he said in a phone call. But Callahan, who lives in the greater Boston area, said he and other employees suspected layoffs might occur in June.

Months earlier than anticipated, Callahan learned the news during a companywide meeting, and lost access to his Slack soon after. He took issue with the eight days of severance offered to him.

After he lost his job, several of his questions have gone unanswered about commission and negotiations to his severance, Callahan said. He last heard from them on May 5, which was also confirmed by the company.

“My incident is not isolated,” Callahan said. “I had no, no, no intentions of going public with this until they started to ignore me and workers.”

“This is about communication and treating people the right way.”



Poppulo, a Denver-based software development company, laid off 80 employees at the end of April, including 20 workers in Colorado.

The move follows downsizing in the tech industry that started in 2022, with impacted companies including Twitter, Microsoft, Dell Technologies Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc., the owner of Facebook and Instagram. But other Colorado sectors aren’t immune to layoffs either, with the energy, cannabis and manufacturing sectors also taking blows earlier this year.

Although inflation is steadily slowing, and the U.S. isn’t in a recession yet, the economic forecast for 2023 remains shaky.

“We made the difficult decision to reduce our global workforce by approximately 12%,” said Eoin Byrne, chief people officer at Poppulo. Founded in 2011, the company specializes in communications and workplace technology.

With its headquarters at 1221 Broadway in Denver, Poppulo also maintains offices in Massachusetts, Ireland and England. Out of the laid-off employees, 53 live in the U.S., 17 in Ireland and 10 in the U.K., said spokesperson Renee Soto.

News goes viral

The layoffs caught the internet’s attention when former employee Chris Callahan took his frustrations to LinkedIn this week. He criticized leadership’s response in the aftermath of the layoffs in a post that’s since received thousands of likes and hundreds of comments.

The 35-year-old’s start as an account executive at the company began last September, with excitement about his manager and the product, he said in a phone call. But Callahan, who lives in the greater Boston area, said he and other employees suspected layoffs might occur in June.

Months earlier than anticipated, Callahan learned the news during a companywide meeting, and lost access to his Slack soon after. He took issue with the eight days of severance offered to him.

After he lost his job, several of his questions have gone unanswered about commission and negotiations to his severance, Callahan said. He last heard from them on May 5, which was also confirmed by the company.

“My incident is not isolated,” Callahan said. “I had no, no, no intentions of going public with this until they started to ignore me and workers.”

“This is about communication and treating people the right way.”

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