San Rafael-based Autodesk Inc. announced Tuesday it will cut about 1,150 jobs, or approximately 13 percent of its workforce, and consolidate some leased offices.

“We are still working through the details so cannot share the local impact to Marin at this time,” said corporate spokeswoman Clay Helm. “We are considering impacted employees for open positions as well as offering severance and outplacement support.”

The job cuts are the second major workforce reduction in less than two years. In February 2016, the company laid off 925 employees, or about 10 percent of its staff at the time.

Autodesk disclosed the latest cuts while announcing “solid” third-quarter results. The company reported a net loss of 12 cents a share in the third quarter, compared with 18 cents a year ago.

The company reported $1.9 billion in annualized recurring revenue for the third quarter, up 24 percent over the previous year.

In recent years, the company has been moving from license sales to an online subscription model for its software, which is used in fields such as architecture, engineering, entertainment media and product design. The company is a year into a subscription-only model.

“As we enter the growth phase of our model transition, we need to rebalance investments to focus on our strategic priorities,” Andrew Anagnost, Autodesk’s president and chief executive officer, said in a released statement. “This includes divesting from some areas and increasing our investment in others. We’re taking this restructuring action from a position of strength.”

Anagnost has been in the job since June. He succeeded Carl Bass, who stepped down in February but remains a corporate adviser and a member of the board of directors.

Following the layoff announcement, the company’s stock fell nearly 11 percent from its closing price of $129.95 in after-hours trading on the Nasdaq market. The stock price has ranged between $68.06 and $131.10 over the past year.

The company has nearly 9,000 employees worldwide. About 2,000 work at the San Rafael headquarters on McInnis Parkway and an office in San Francisco, according to the San Francisco Business Times.

Autodesk was founded in 1982 by a small group of computer programmers who ran the operation out of a two-bedroom home in Mill Valley. The company went public in 1985 and moved to its current headquarters in 1994.