The green bird is at it again, turning its entire company digital to better suit its design. Duolingo’s AI-first strategy is leading the way forward for the organization, and the pivot has been a long time in the making. CEO Luis von Ahn announced the AI transformation at Duolingo via a statement on LinkedIn, explaining that it was time for the company to make a big change similar to how it switched to a mobile-first platform in 2012.
Duolingo’s AI announcement came with the reassurance that it would continue to “care deeply” about its employees through the course of the switch. This is not the first time we’ve heard about the company’s decision to go all-in on AI. Duolingo has cut contractors in favor of AI because it found it much harder to scale up content at the pace necessary to keep up with its growing customer base.
For now, the company is willing to take “occasional small hits” on quality to seize the moment even before the tech is perfected. Is this a compromise businesses should pursue? It is a very dangerous path to tread, especially when the margin on quality can be moved at any given time.

Duolingo’s decisions around AI echo a bigger trend of businesses rushing to adopt AI at any cost. (Image: Duolingo)
Understanding Duolingo’s AI-First Strategy—What’s Changing?
The AI transformation at Duolingo is very clear-cut and the company has a straightforward idea of what it plans to change and how. Unlike other businesses that are still experimenting with the possible applications of AI in their business, Duolingo is essentially a content creator and it plans to leave a large part of the creation to artificial intelligence.
Duolingo Will Cut Contractors in Favor of AI
To start with, Duolingo will “gradually stop using contractors to do work that AI can handle,” essentially suggesting that much of the learning material generated for its language, music, and other learning courses will be created using AI. This will speed up the pace at which the company is able to churn out content, without having to actively wait for workers to sit and design the material at a human pace.
Duolingo CEO’s statement on AI explained that they “owe” it to their learners to scale up the content, and it could take decades to do it manually. In a separate post, the company asked workers to start with AI for every task. The post also recommends spending 10% of their time learning, sharing what they learn, building and experimenting carefully, and avoiding overbuilding when existing tools are available.
Duolingo AI Headcount Management Strategy
Duolingo’s AI-first strategy will also seek AI use as part of the hiring strategy for necessary roles. So will Duolingo still hire real workers amidst this AI shift? Yes, but only when a team can prove why they cannot accomplish the tasks with AI instead. Productivity expectations are expected to rise in the process of relying on AI.
Duolingo AI’s engagement will also be included in decisions on evaluating employee performance. “AI use will be part of what we evaluate in performance reviews,” Luis von Ahn explained in the statement. The AI-first approach at the company will leave no stone unturned, integrating it into the company systems wherever possible.
Duolingo is also reportedly launching an AI Advisory Board of engineering leaders to help shape the AI strategy and provide guidance on tools and applications for employees to use.
Despite Duolingo’s AI-First Approach, It Will Still Care Deeply for Employees
Employees at Duolingo will likely have to teach themselves all they can about AI in the coming months in order to keep up with the changing times. With a mission to rethink how the company works and how it can add AI to every stream of functioning, employees will have no time to fret about their jobs.
Despite all signs pointing to the contrary, the CEO reassured workers that Duolingo’s AI-first strategy was not meant to replace them with AI. Instead, these tools could eliminate the bottlenecks that got in the way of their productivity, as offloading many of the tasks to AI could free them to explore creative work and apply themselves to real-world tasks. This strategy sounds great on paper, but in reality, it is not one that employees may enjoy adapting to in the coming months.
What Will the AI Transformation at Duolingo Mean for the Business?
Duolingo’s AI discussions heavily emphasize the fact that the company will be willing to take a small hit on quantity in favor of getting on the AI bandwagon early. There are many consequences to using this strategy. For one, many customers are not impressed by the switch to AI and don’t want to support a business that aims to feed them auto-generated content.
Similarly, many have realized that if AI tools act as the source for the material, there’s nothing stopping them from using AI tools themselves instead of an app that makes the company money. It would be more cumbersome to take this route, certainly, but not impossible.
Many users have already expressed their desire to give up on their hard-earned daily streaks on the app and cancel their membership because of Duolingo’s AI-first strategy. Is it possible for a company to cannibalize itself and lose all the goodwill it has earned over the years? Most certainly.
Should Other Businesses Seek an AI Transformation Like Duolingo?
There’s a fair bit of appeal to Duolingo’s AI-first approach. It would cut down significantly on expenses on employees while also scaling up the amount of material generated by leaps and bounds. The company will still have to hire AI handlers and fact-checkers, but their numbers would be much smaller.
Still, there are risks for HR leaders and employers to consider. Pushing employees to use AI in all things can easily impede creativity and have problems show up where there was none before. Solely hiring employees experienced with AI could easily skew the workforce and cut out otherwise talented workers who would have been a good fit for the organization, instead leaving the role to someone who just happened to know how to interact with AI.
Increased Pressure Regarding Productivity Could Be Harmful
AI tools are not infallible and the pressure to cross-check content would heighten, but this is par for the course. However, with the added pressures of productivity via the use of AI, the stress on workers could multiply. The need for constant scale-ups to keep bosses happy will be hard to promise long-term, even with AI tools, and the system could struggle to plug all the holes caused as a result.
With customers and employees both unhappy, a rigidly AI-first approach instead of a people-first approach could alienate both parties. It could also encourage consumers to go straight to the source, instead of wasting time on an app with limits or paid subscriptions.
If AI can teach someone about astrophysics and Spanish, it makes more logical sense to spend on an AI subscription than Duolingo, where the content is more limited, despite the company’s best attempts.
Losing customers doesn’t seem like the best outcome, but we’ll admit that for the most part, customers will stay, regardless of whether Duolingo runs the entire company using AI. Employers and HR leaders will need to be strategic and think about the possible long-term consequences of putting all their resources into one AI basket, and then decide how best to navigate changes in the modern world.
What do you think about Duolingo’s AI-first strategy? Let us know. Subscribe to The HR Digest for more updates on how the world of work is evolving in 2025.