ABBYY Lays Off Russian Expatriate Software Engineers

Hundreds of software engineers were laid off as ABBYY shut down its R&D department

Hundreds of software developers who left Russia and Belarus in 2022 to continue working with ABBYY have reportedly been fired in a “reorganization” of offices in three European countries.

Founded in the USSR in 1989, ABBYY has provided business software services described as “intelligent automation solutions.” The company eventually became transnational and moved its headquarters to Silicon Valley.

When the Russia-Ukraine conflict began in February 2022, the company offered a large number of Russian developers relocation options in Cyprus, Hungary, or Serbia. However, on Monday, most of these developers were fired via conference call.

The company has “embarked on a path of business transformation and modernization” and “reorganized” key operations such as its Research and Development (R&D) department, a spokesperson for ABBYY USA said in a statement.

“This global transformation allows us to reinvest in future growth and accelerate product and solution innovation for our customers,” they added.
ABBYY declined to disclose the number of people affected by the layoffs. Several Russian media outlets, citing the sacked programmers who wished to remain anonymous, estimated the number to be between 200 and 400 people. The Cyprus office was reportedly closed entirely.

“They fired everyone who had a Russian passport” was one claim made in multiple social media posts. Some former employees claimed that they were replaced by less expensive coders from India, although this could not be verified.

Russian lawmaker Alexandr Khinstein commented on the news by warning Russians that they would always face discrimination in the West.

“I don’t intend to gloat about this, people found themselves in a difficult situation,” he wrote on Telegram. “But their example should serve as a good lesson for everyone going forward: don’t rely on a caring foreign uncle. It doesn’t matter whether you are a ‘good’ or a ‘bad’ Russian, you are still Russian, and therefore a second-class citizen.”

The former employees have since speculated that American investors may have pressured the company to remove all Russian and Belarusian employees, although there were reports that some had managed to keep their jobs.

“It wasn’t the Russians who were fired, but the entire development team. The remaining employees [with Russian citizenship], for example from the business development department, remained in the company,” founder of the recruiting company NEWHR, Kira Kuzmenko, told Forbes Russia. “Thing is, historically, all of ABBYY’s development was in Russian,” she explained.

Sacked employees lamented on social media that no one was left at the company who knew how to maintain service contracts, while one quashed rumors about a potential sale of the business, saying that this would require value, and the current management just “flushed a huge amount of value down the toilet.”

ABBYY was founded in 1989 by David Yang, an Armenian graduate of the Moscow Institute for Physics and Technology (MIPT). The company’s website makes no mention of its origins and does not even have a Russian-language presentation.