WiseTech begins redundancies but removes AI references from emails to Chinese employees

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WiseTech has started informing staff about job losses affecting 2,000 workers across 40 countries, citing AI advancements. However, employees discovered that emails sent to Chinese staff omitted all mentions of artificial intelligence, instead using the term 'global transformation.' The change appears linked to a recent Chinese court ruling that awarded compensation to a worker replaced by AI.

WiseTech Starts Notifying Staff of AI-Driven Job Cuts

WiseTech has begun the process of informing employees about redundancies affecting nearly 2,000 workers, almost three months after the ASX-listed company announced plans to cut approximately 30% of its 7,000-strong workforce

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. The logistics software company attributed the WiseTech AI job cuts to advances in artificial intelligence, stating in an email to staff this week that "AI has fundamentally changed how work gets done across many industries and businesses"

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. A company spokesperson confirmed the process had begun in South Korea and Mexico, with other countries including Australia set to follow next week

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Source: Financial Review

Source: Financial Review

Modified Language in Internal Communications to Chinese Staff

Employees quickly noticed a significant discrepancy in how the company communicated with different regions. In internal WiseTech Global Teams chats seen by Guardian Australia, staff pointed out that the email sent to Chinese employees replaced "AI transformation" with "global transformation" and omitted the second line explaining AI's impact entirely

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. Workers questioned chief executive Zubin Appoo about whether this modification was a response to a recent Chinese court ruling that compensated a tech company employee who was replaced by AI almost A$53,000

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. One employee challenged the logic: "Changing the content of just one email seems quite confusing. We have several emails that can demonstrate it was an AI layoff"

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Company Defends Regional Communication Variations

Appoo responded to employee concerns by explaining that "different jurisdictions have different legal and regulatory requirements, which is why some communications may vary by country"

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. A WiseTech spokesperson emphasized that the language of internal communications "has no bearing on the obligations we have to our employees in this process, which remain constant regardless of geography," adding that the company remains "committed to fulfilling these obligations and treating our employees fairly and respectfully"

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. The Australian Financial Review reported that the increasingly bitter redundancy fight between staff at Australia's largest listed technology company and its leadership has intensified following these revelations

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Low Morale and Mounting Anxiety Among Tech Workers

The three-month wait has taken a severe toll on employee wellbeing. A Sydney-based employee told Guardian Australia it had been "three months of stress and checking his inbox every morning," with the anxiety now shifting "into something else. More like sadness" . Low morale is evident in employee communications, with one staff member lamenting: "I still remember being proud telling people what the company stood for and how amazing it was to work here. Throughout this process I've watched good hardworking friends and colleagues have to resort to hallway whispers and gossip to find out clues about their fate at the company, that's not transparency"

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. The uncertainty has led employees to defer major life decisions including holidays, home purchases, and starting families

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Lack of Transparency Fuels Employee Frustration

A Germany-based employee criticized the lack of transparency, stating that communication from WiseTech doesn't appear backed by a "real plan." He added: "Our leadership is ghosting their complete reporting line and hiding behind Zubin's emails - which are anything other than clear and specific. Everything has come to a halt now because people do not know what the future will bring"

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. Employees are now fighting for anything above the minimum redundancy packages as the reality of job losses becomes imminent

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Union Mobilization and Calls for Accountability

Professionals Australia, representing the tech workers, presented a petition signed by nearly 600 WiseTech employees to Appoo last week, demanding fair redundancy packages, transparency, and genuine consultation

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. Paul Inglis, director at Professionals Australia, stated: "This is what AI disruption looks like on the ground and workers are terrified. In just eight weeks, union membership at WiseTech has surged over 30 per cent of the technical workforce. That sends a clear message: workers do not feel protected navigating this change alone"

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. Inglis emphasized that "big tech cannot be allowed to reshape the workforce without accountability"

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, signaling growing resistance to AI-driven job cuts across the technology sector.

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