Application Security
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Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Next-Generation Technologies & Secure Development
Interim CEO Ken MacAskill Says Changes Will Speed Product Development and Execution

Snyk reportedly plans to cut 90 workers in an effort to move faster by flattening leadership, unifying go-to-market operations and aligning R&D around four focused areas.
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The Boston-based application security vendor revealed plans to simplify its structure by reducing the size of some teams in a push to increase focus, clarify mission and build tools faster, said CEO Ken MacAskill. Snyk didn’t disclose how many employees were being laid off, though publication Globes reported 90 workers were affected across the United States as well as in Snyk’s Israeli development center.
“What is changing is how we are organized,” MacAskill wrote Wednesday in a note to customers and partners. “We are simplifying our structure so we can move faster for you, and that includes reducing the size of some teams. We are saying goodbye to colleagues we respect, people whose work is in the products you use every day and we are treating everyone affected with fairness and care.”
MacAskill said Snyk is unifying research and development under one leader and focusing its efforts on AI-written code, autonomous agents in production, vulnerabilities that now chain into real attacks and adversaries that never sleep. The layoffs and accompanying revamp will help Snyk both protect the software being used by customers today and build what secures the AI-driven software coming next.
“The way software gets built is changing faster than at any point in our careers, with AI and autonomous agents writing, deploying and modifying code, and creating more security problems our customers face right now,” MacAskill wrote in the note. “So, we are organizing to move at that speed, with a more focused team, a clearer mission and the tools to build faster for you.”
This is the fourth round of layoffs Snyk has carried out in four years and follows the company cutting 128 workers – or 11% of its workforce – in April 2023, 198 workers – or 14% of its workforce – in October 2022 and 30 workers in June 2022. Snyk currently employs 1,481 people, according to IT-Harvest, meaning the latest round of cuts will reportedly affect 6% of the company’s workforce (see: Snyk Finds Itself at Crossroads as Its IPO Prospects Dim).
Snyk Grapples With CEO Change, Slowing Growth, Valuation Drop
These are Snyk’s first layoffs since Peter McKay announced his intent to step down as CEO, writing in February, “I believe the right path forward for Snyk’s next decade is to bring in a leader with deep roots in product innovation and artificial intelligence” and saying he’d “remain fully engaged as CEO until my successor is found.” McKay left the CEO role in April and was replaced on an interim basis by MacAskill, who had been CFO.
Snyk in 2022 lost $267 million on sales of just $147 million, according to public filings in the United Kingdom. In 2023, Snyk revenue’s jumped nearly 50% to $220.1 million, while losses improved by nearly 35% to $175.3 million. Then in 2024, Snyk’s revenue growth slowed to 26.5%, with sales increasing to $278.4 million, while losses only improved by 5% and came in at $166.5 million. Snyk hasn’t yet reported 2025 figures.
The company’s valuation dropped sharply after hitting a high-water mark of $8.5 billion in September 2021. By December 2022, Snyk’s valuation fell $1.1 billion to $7.4 billion when it closed a $196.5 million Series G round. In mid-2023, T. Rowe Price marked Snyk’s valuation down to $6.9 billion, and BlackRock over the past year dropped its valuation of Snyk to $3.7 billion, The Information reported last October.
Forrester last year ranked Snyk’s static application security testing product third out of the 10 evaluated, behind Veracode and Checkmarx, with the technology analyst firm praising Snyk for fast innovation but criticizing the company for a lack of support for a variety of programming languages. The company’s application security testing tool was ranked third by Gartner last year behind Black Duck and Checkmarx.
Snyk has relied on at least a dozen tuck-in acquisitions to expand its total addressable market since the company’s founding in 2015, buying Swiss AI security research startup Invariant Labs in June 2025 to secure new AI workflows and protocols like MCP. And in November 2024, Snyk bought Portuguese dynamic application security testing company Probely to address the rising demand for API security.
