Pluralsight, a Utah tech “unicorn” that laid off 400 staffers earlier this month, is moving some of those jobs to India — and the authors creating its courses will now be paid less.
in a blog post that a “challenging economic environment” grew worse in the last quarter of the year and necessitated the staff reduction and restructuring.“As your CEO, I own this outcome and take full responsibility for the decisions that got us here,” he said.Utley said Pluralsight has spent the last year building “technical teams” in India, and that the company expects to transition the author support teams there in the first half of 2023.
Utley also told authors that the company is “updating revenue attribution” this month to “more accurately tie” author payouts to video viewership. He said that “revenue attribution is simply determining the breakdown in subscription revenues tied to author-generated video content, and all the other features Pluralsight develops and sells to its customers.”
As the company has grown, Utley said, its customers are asking for less videos and more “hands-on experiences.” He said, for instance, business customers want more features to assess skills their employees are learning from Pluralsight products. “And as a result, we do anticipate a decrease of approximately 25% to revenue attributable to video content. We recognize the timing of the shift will never be optimal,” he said, “but I want to note we do not currently anticipate this type of a significant shift in the future.”, the average pay for an author at Pluralsight is $80,850 a year. That varies widely, based on how many courses an author creates.
Utley said the company will now spend more to create those assessment features for courses, which he said show customers “where they have gaps and where they have needs, and then how to address those.”
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