Two-year old human-resources startup Zenefits has gotten into a very public brawl with 60-year-old human resources company, ADP. The fight started late last week. Zenefits offers free HR software that ...
David Sacks walked into Dolores Park Café in San Francisco to talk to Lars Dalgaard, a venture capitalist, about what he should do with his life. Or rather, his money. Sacks, who is 43 and has thick ...
For small companies that can’t afford a human resources person, managing HR can be a slog. Zenefits, a San Francisco-based startup, is making the process easier, overhauling an industry that often ...
As an all-in-one solution within the human resource (HR) tech industry, Zenefits offers organizations with a HRIS platform centered on benefits administration and created to support any business’s ...
Troubled unicorn startup Zenefits continues to struggle, and its CEO David Sacks announced on Tuesday that more than 100 employees will be laid off and more bought out. This is the second round of ...
In a bid to get past its most recent controversies, Zenefits is launching its long-anticipated, integrated human resources app platform, called Z2, today, with 17 third-party partners as part of the ...
Zenefits will cease being a broker of record and transition into solely providing technology for outside firms, the company announced today. Processing Content The San Francisco-based firm’s existing ...
Zenefits had a rough year. The company — previously a darling of Silicon Valley — was rocked by a massive insurance scandal in February and has been fighting to regain the trust of customers and ...
Just one year ago, Zenefits earned a monster $4.5 billion valuation. Today, the troubled tech startup is giving it back. Zenefits is moving to appease investors, who were likely incensed by a series ...
Zenefits today is laying off another 9% of its staff — or 106 additional people — and offering its existing employees a buyout offer as it continues its transition following former CEO Parker Conrad ...
California’s insurance regulator will collect a $3.5-million fine from a San Francisco employee benefits start-up that cheated state education requirements for sales agents. Zenefits admitted to ...
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