Google didn’t buy the company. The founders exited. The remaining team got lucky. But this isn’t how most startup stories end.
Windsurf was one of the most prominent and promising AI startups in the market. It had a compelling combination of financial performance, product traction, and engineering credibility that made it attractive to both investors and strategic acquirers.
It was generating$84 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR)
It had a strong reputation forengineering excellence, drawing praise from across the tech ecosystem
It was well regarded by users and respected among peers for delivering on technical performance
EvenOpenAI reportedly showed serious interest in acquiring it, highlighting its perceived strategic value
So when major news outlets reported thatGoogle had acquired Windsurf for $2.4 billion, it was easy to assume this was a conventional success story, a big exit where everyone involved would walk away as winners.
But beneath the headline, the reality was very different.Google didn’t acquire Windsurf outrightin the traditional sense. Instead, the tech giant executed a more targeted maneuver.
Googlelicensed Windsurf’s core intellectual property,hired the founders along with around 40 of the most critical engineers, and left the remaining parts of the company—including about200 employees and over $100 million in cash—intact and independent.
As I wrote about previously with regard toHire&License, this is part of a broader shift in how tech giants approach acquisitions in the current market:
Rather than absorb entire companies, today’s acquirers increasingly focus on extracting strategic value while minimizing integration risk and overhead. In Windsurf’s case, this meant focusing on:
Acquiring elite engineering talentwho could be rapidly deployed on internal projects
Gaining access to proprietary IPwithout taking on the full burden of the company’s operations
Accelerating internal AI initiativesthrough talent and technology absorption
Google didn’t need the revenue—its core business generates $84 million in a matter of hours. What it did need was specialized human capital and technical IP.
So what happened to the rest of the company… Here’s a more detailed breakdown of the state of Windsurf post-deal:
More than40 early engineers reportedly received seven-figure payouts, thanks to equity acceleration and hiring packages
Only about15 engineers remained, most of whom had joined in the past year and weren’t included in the transition
The remaining 200+ employees were predominantly insales, operations, customer success, and administrative functions
Windsurf still hadover $100 million in cash reservesthanks to Google as part of the deal, enough to sustain operations.
At this point, the leadership and remaining team had a choice - they could have wound down operations and distributed the cash to stakeholders (would never happen), or Instead they chose to continue the business and explore new strategic options.
In an extraordinary turn of events, within just 72 hours of the Google deal closing, Windsurf’s remaining operations were acquired byCognition—a fast-rising AI startup backed by Founders Fund and recently valued at over $3 billion.
The remaining team at Windsurf wassuccessfully transitioned to Cognition, preserving jobs and operational continuity
Employee equity was reportedlyconverted into Cognition stock, giving the team a new stake in a high-growth company at a $3B valuation
No layoffs occurred (yet), and the company was spared the usual chaos of a partial acquisition or shutdown
Deals like this are incredibly rare. In most similar situations, teams are laid off, operations are shut down, and equity becomes worthless. This was a best-case scenario—a rare "soft landing" that few startups ever experience.
Some online criticism accused Windsurf’s founders of abandoning the team… which they kind of did. You can blame Google too but at $2.3T there’s nothing you can do and their stock is up 5% as of today so that’s $115B in market cap gain.
CEOVarunand his leadership team:
Preserved $2.3 billion in valuefor investors and employees with vested equity
Navigated a complex, high-stakes transaction on an extremely short timeline after the OpenAi deal fell apart.
Made decisions that kept the remaining company stable and capable of surviving independently, though a husk of its former self.
So it definitely seems like they took care of themselves and earlier employees, investors etc and had no power to help the newer people + non essential.
This story might sound like a creative solution and an inspiring save. And in many ways, it is. But it’s important to recognize how rare and fragile this type of outcome really is.
The Windsurf team was able to pull this off because:
They retained askilled and desirable group of remaining employees
The company hadample cash on handto support a transition or extend the runway
TheAI market remains intensely competitive for talent, driving demand from companies like Cognition
There happened to be astrategic buyer in the market who could move fast and absorb the team
In the vast majority of cases where founders and core teams are acquired or exit early, the remaining company falls apart. Teams are disbanded. Assets are sold off. And few people walk away with anything.
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