Randstad sells tech unit to LTM for $185Mn in partnership deal

DIEMEN, NETHERLANDS — Randstad has agreed to sell its technology and consulting services business in Europe and Australia to LTM, a Larsen & Toubro Group company, for $185 million (€160 million), in a three-part deal .
According to a company press release, beyond the sale, LTM is designated as technology partner for Randstad’s India Global Capability Center (GCC), and Randstad is appointed as LTM’s strategic global talent partner. The divested operations generated US$511 million (€469 million) in 2025 revenue — approximately 2% of Randstad’s $25.2 billion (€23.1 billion) total 2025 revenue. The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, regulatory approvals, and employee representative consultation.
Randstad streamlines portfolio with LTM tech divestiture
The sale enables Randstad to exit technology staffing and consulting — a margin-compressed segment — and redirect investment toward its specialist talent services and digital marketplace businesses.
For LTM, the acquisition provides immediate European and Australian client footprints and delivery operations, reducing the cost of organic expansion into those geographies.
The deal’s three-part structure — cash sale, India GCC technology partnership, and reciprocal talent supply — creates mutual commercial dependencies between Randstad and LTM beyond the transaction itself.
“We are equally excited to partner with LTM, where their AI expertise will be instrumental in evolving our digital capabilities,” said Sander van ‘t Noordende, Chief Executive Officer of Randstad.
Talent partnership balances LTM’s tech acquisition structure
LTM’s appointment as technology partner for Randstad’s India GCC embeds its AI engineering teams inside one of the world’s largest talent platforms, enabling domain-specific artificial intelligence (AI) development.
Randstad’s designation as LTM’s global talent partner creates a recurring workforce supply relationship — giving LTM structured staffing access as it grows its client base across new markets.
The 360° structure converts a straightforward portfolio divestiture into a bilateral commercial relationship — with each party supplying the other’s strategic needs in technology services and talent.
“This 360° partnership with Randstad would be a key step forward in our growth journey,” said Venu Lambu, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of LTM.
The divestiture reflects a trend of large staffing firms exiting capital-intensive technology consulting to concentrate on specialty staffing and platform-based services — a portfolio shift Adecco and ManpowerGroup have also pursued.
For LTM, the deal provides European and Australian client relationships, revenue, and local talent networks in markets that LTM identified as strategically important to its five-year growth plan.
LTM’s European expansion via acquisition mirrors the market-entry playbook used by Indian IT peers that have built European client books through bolt-on deals rather than organic growth.
For Randstad, the 360° structure converts a divestiture into an ongoing AI services exchange — positioning the company to benefit from LTM’s AI capabilities while exiting a lower-margin business segment.

Independent




