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TTEC Just Paused Its 401(k) Match To Pay For AI

Published May 9, 2026
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Summary:
  • TTEC, a $2 billion-plus customer experience services firm, paused its 401(k) company match for US staff through the end of 2026.
  • The firm linked the pause to investments in AI tools, training, and automation.
  • TTEC's stock has fallen from over $110 in late 2021 to about $3 at the close on May 7, 2026.

Companies are starting to pull workplace benefits to pay for the AI build, and TTEC just made it explicit.

The customer experience outsourcing firm told staff in an April 30 memo that it was pausing the company match on its 401(k) plan, effective Q2 2026, through the rest of the year. The reason given: financial flexibility to invest in AI tools, training, and automation.

The Math Inside The Decision

TTEC is under real pressure. Q1 revenue fell 7% from a year earlier, and annual global revenue dropped 3.2% to $2.1 billion in the latest fiscal year.

The stock has gone from above $110 in late 2021 to about $3 at Thursday's close. That is the backdrop the benefit cut was made against.

The previous match was up to 3% of an employee's salary if the worker put in at least 6%. That match is now suspended, though the plan itself stays in place.

A Pattern, Not A One-Off

Chief People Officer Laura Butler told staff the nine-month pause will "protect the long-term strength" of the business. The company says it will reassess early next year and resume contributions if results allow it.

TTEC's executives told staff they are not alone. The CEO of TTEC Digital, Chris Brown, said in an internal meeting that other professional services firms are doing similar things.

Deloitte is reducing or cutting parental leave, paid time off, a pension plan, and IVF funding for some employees. Zoom has cut weeks of parental leave - the common thread is tighter cost controls and a pivot toward AI-driven operating models.

Craig Copeland of the Employee Benefit Research Institute said benefit cuts usually show up before layoffs. If the economy gets worse, more companies will follow.

What To Watch

CEO and chairman Kenneth Tuchman said in TTEC's 2025 annual report that he wants the company to be "more agile and more profitable" by 2027.

The 401(k) pause is part of getting there. Whether the match comes back in early 2027 will be the cleanest signal of how the AI bet is paying off.

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