The news: The Trade Desk (TTD) is cutting fewer than 1% of its roughly 3,900 employees, per company statements, even as it highlights continued hiring momentum with nearly 1,000 additions this year.
TTD did not say which departments the layoffs targeted. But the reduction follows a period of high-profile departures, including longtime engineering leader Jud Spencer, and comes one year after what CEO Jeff Green described as the firm’s largest reorganization, which reshaped client-facing teams following TTD’s first earnings miss.
Why it matters: The layoffs may be small, but they arrive as competition from Amazon intensifies and as advertisers push harder on programmatic transparency.
- TTD is loosening its once-fixed fees as Amazon DSP gains ground; agencies now report negotiable pricing and service sweeteners, signaling real competitive pressure and new leverage for buyers.
- The company has been reshuffling talent to align with an AI-driven future, positioning Kokai as the centerpiece of its long-term roadmap.
- At the same time, TTD is navigating scrutiny around reseller accountability and the rollout of its new prebid wrapper OpenAds, making operational clarity increasingly important. The changes suggest TTD is still tuning its structure to balance efficiency, growth ambitions, and investor expectations heading into 2026.