Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Facebook Slashdot.org

Meta Plans Thousands More Layoffs As Soon As This Week (indiatimes.com) 79

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Economic Times: Meta, the owner of Facebook andInstagram, is planning a fresh round of layoffs and will cut thousands of employees as soon as this week, according to people familiar with the matter. The world's largest social networking company is eliminating more jobs, on top of a 13% reduction in November, in a bid to become a more efficient organization. In its earlier round of cuts, Meta slashed 11,000 workers in what was its first-ever major layoff.

The company has also been working to flatten its organization, giving buyout packages to managers and cutting whole teams it deems nonessential, Bloomberg News reported in February, a move that is still being finalized and could affect thousands of staffers. The imminent round of cuts is being driven by financial targets and is separate from the "flattening," said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing internal matters. Meta, which has seen a slowdown in advertising revenue and has shifted focus to a virtual-reality platform called the metaverse, has been asking directors and vice presidents to make lists of employees that can be let go, the people said. This phase of layoffs could be finalized in the next week, according to the people.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Meta Plans Thousands More Layoffs As Soon As This Week

Comments Filter:
  • by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2023 @08:06AM (#63349773)

    Layoff rounds are happening everywhere regularly (usually every 2 to 5 years), but two rounds so close to each other spell "danger" for a company.
    Something must be very rotten inside Meta, and I am not talking (only) about Mark this time.

    • It's been reported that the ad market is going to hell. I don't think Meta can survive only on people promoting their own shitposts on Facebook / Instagram.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by null etc. ( 524767 )

      Actually, there's nothing nefarious about this at all. Zuck wants to give the shareholders some earnings boners so that they leave him alone about his pet projects.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        Zuck runs FB as a dictator. He has majority control of voting shares (unlike, say, Bezos at Amazon (9,4%) or Musk at Tesla (13,4%)).

        Honestly, though, as much as Meta is everyone's favourite punching bag - and as stupid as this "pivot to the Metaverse" is - I don't like seeing layoffs there. Facebook Research has done a lot of really good work on free, open source projects in the AI field.

    • Jerome Powell is about to raise interest rates again. This hits tech stocks especially hard and so they're going to do a massive round of layoffs to boost their stock price. That's all that's going on here.

      This is by design. Powell has repeatedly said he's raising interest rates in order to cause layoffs because that's the only way you can conceive lowering inflation.

      It is telling that we had decades of inflation in healthcare and education and at least a decade and rent in housing and nobody cared.
      • Definitely agree with the big bosses noticing the worker bees had a little advantage for a few years. Canâ(TM)t have that. The bosses are now going to take away that little bit of money we workers earned the last few years. Canâ(TM)t start a union if youâ(TM)re unemployed.
      • It is telling that we had decades of inflation in healthcare and education and at least a decade and rent in housing and nobody cared. But as soon as the inflation starts to be felt at the top suddenly it's all hands on deck. It's also interesting that we have all this talk about cooling the economy and causing layoffs right around the time workers are getting a little bit of bargaining power and talking about unionization.

        This is all that's happening. Workers got a bit uppity during and directly after the pandemic. Union drives were increasing, and peons were beginning to feel like they had a leg to stand on financially, so they weren't quite as willing to take the never ending stream of bullshit that most companies would like to shovel at them. It's now time to beat them back into submission.

        As wonderful as the fantasy of a government that operates "of the people, for the people, by the people," is? Sooner or later we all h

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          It is telling that we had decades of inflation in healthcare and education and at least a decade and rent in housing and nobody cared. But as soon as the inflation starts to be felt at the top suddenly it's all hands on deck. It's also interesting that we have all this talk about cooling the economy and causing layoffs right around the time workers are getting a little bit of bargaining power and talking about unionization.

          This is all that's happening. Workers got a bit uppity during and directly after the pandemic. Union drives were increasing, and peons were beginning to feel like they had a leg to stand on financially, so they weren't quite as willing to take the never ending stream of bullshit that most companies would like to shovel at them. It's now time to beat them back into submission.

          The problem with that approach is that I've heard more software engineers talking about unions in the past six months than I did in the twenty years prior, and unlike those twenty years, most of the comments are in favor of unions, rather than talking about what a mistake they are.

          The best way to get unions is to try to "beat them [workers] back into submission". Happy employees don't start unions. The more unhappy you make them, the harder they tend to push back.

          As wonderful as the fantasy of a government that operates "of the people, for the people, by the people," is? Sooner or later we all have to wake up to the reality that our government is 100% "of big business, for big business, by big business." That's it. End of line. If you aren't a billionaire? You don't fucking matter. Period.

          The very existence of unions is fundamenta

          • The very existence of unions is fundamentally a workaround for flawed governments that don't adequately protect workers. Governments either do their jobs or they get replaced. Unions are their replacement. Government actions in the area of employee protection have become largely moot, because governments themselves have become largely irrelevant.

            On the contrary, governments are not irrelevant at all. Governments are actively working branches of big business, doing everything they can to prevent worker revolt and increase corporate profits. While the Democrats in the USA talk a good game about unions, make no mistake. If it seems workers are utilizing unions to gain traction again, they will, absolutely, be legally shackled. There is no way the government division of America's corporatocracy will let that shit stand. No way at all.

            The AFA was the po

        • But it means we have to teach critical thinking and teach people how to evaluate claims. You'll get a lot of push back on that because the powers that be know that they won't be in power very long if the majority of the population can think critically. This is why the right wing came up with the idea of critical race theory and why they're going hard at taking over the schools and banning books
      • "Powell has repeatedly said he's raising interest rates in order to cause layoffs", please cite where he said that.

    • Meta Reality labs lost $13.7 billion on sales of $750 million last year... do you begin to see the problem? Zuck is now basically saying, "Forget all that hype I told you about the Metaverse, we're an AI company now!" Shareholder revolt in 3... 2... 1...
      • "Shareholder revolt in 3... 2... 1..."

        That's going to be a bit difficult as long as Zuck owns the majority of shareholder votes personally, which he does. If push comes to shove, they could try proving in a court that Zuck breached his fiduciary duties to the other shareholders (it's not legal for the majority shareholder to just vote all the money into his personal account and tell the other shareholders, "Sorry, suckers."). But that ain't easy.

      • by t0qer ( 230538 )

        >"Forget all that hype I told you about the Metaverse, we're an AI company now!"

        I read this in Jello Biafra's voice. [youtu.be]

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      Layoff rounds are happening everywhere regularly (usually every 2 to 5 years), but two rounds so close to each other spell "danger" for a company. Something must be very rotten inside Meta, and I am not talking (only) about Mark this time.

      Something has been rotten for a long time. Want to know why people are using Facebook less and less? It is mostly because they focus on chasing whatever the latest teen fad is, rather than fixing the bugs in their existing crapware, all while dropping longstanding features for no obvious reason.

      Between bogus Content ID claims, broken systems that can make it impossible to start live streaming sessions if you accidentally close the window at the wrong time, and other headaches, the Facebook live streaming

    • Layoff rounds are happening everywhere regularly (usually every 2 to 5 years), but two rounds so close to each other spell "danger" for a company.

      They do nothing of the sort. The only danger here is making ignorant statements about a company health without looking at facts. You know what you get after you subtract 11000 employees from Facebook's 2022 employee count? Their largest ever year on year employee growth count.

      Let that sink in for a second. After laying off 11000 employees Facebook's employees still grew by more than any other year.

      This isn't "danger". This is a course correction for a stupid hiring spree.

      • This isn't "danger". This is a course correction for a stupid hiring spree.

        Um... yeah, that spells danger.
        AKA "avoid this company at all costs, they have no clue what they are doing".

    • I _HAVE_ been looking for a replacement for my Meta job for months now. The day of the first layoffs was a surreal experience (no pun intended, I work in the Surreal division). Everybody came into work and were so happy to see each other, like, "You still work here? Awesome! I was going to miss you if you were gone!" Meta's current strategy is to fire the middle managers and keep the contractors.
  • Peak Digital (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Tuesday March 07, 2023 @08:30AM (#63349821)

    Many IT experts have seen this coming in recent years. The industrialisation of IT is in full swing and virtualization, automation and next AI/ML will do the bulk of the "work", if you could even call it that. The only IT experts meetups still happening on a regular basis in my town are those of DevOps and even those guys have moved to discussing the various GUI config tools and management kits that automate most of their work as well.

    The software-bots will take our jobs and if I'm lucky I'll basically be clicking together services and making some PO happy with colorful things to click on. And maybe fix some bad accident with a nightshift once or twice a year.

    This is what we have been working on and it's finally arrived. In the end this will spell more wealth for all.

    • s/for all/for Zuck/

    • What you said is true, but not for Meta layoffs, they just targeting short term profits on balance sheet, FOR NOW
    • by cats-paw ( 34890 )

      This is what we have been working on and it's finally arrived. In the end this will spell more wealth for all.

      WTF are you talking about.

      anyone paying attention, and who doesnt' have an agenda, knows that the productivity gains of workers over the last 30 years have gone to the 1%.

      any advancement in productivity is going to accelerate our dystopian future not help us avoid it. The powers that be will make sure that any possibility of using productivity gains to actually have a better life will be sucked o

    • This is what we have been working on and it's finally arrived. In the end this will spell more wealth for all.

      True, the wealthy owning all the bots will be able to order more food from Uber creating a lot of new jobs. Seriously, I'm skeptical about the AI will replace coders, journalists artists thing. For now, they are just new dev/search/design tools. Let's assume it does replace the majority of them (ignoring outliers who can't be replaced for some reason), how do we all get more wealth from this? And preferably in short time, not next generation, because people need to eat during their whole lifetime.

  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2023 @08:38AM (#63349837)

    Meta stands for Metastasize, and yet more layoffs proves it.

    • Sounds more like it's going into remission, really.

    • Meta stands for Metastasize, and yet more layoffs proves it.

      Technically that's the opposite of what is happening. Ironically for your analogy when we first started mocking the name change and joking about metastasize Facebook was going through an insane growth period, a period of growth where even after the biopsy that cut 11000 workers out of the cancer it was still bigger than the year before.

      So ... did we cure it? Is Meta actually getting better and going into remission? Is that what you're trying to tell us? I think your joke is falling flat.

      • by Sebby ( 238625 )

        You're clearly an idiot - they're clearly losing weight from the cancer. It's not remission.

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2023 @09:14AM (#63349931)

    At least being laid off from Meta you wont be publicly humiliated and declared incompetent on Twitter by a sociopathic billionaire. At least your dignity will be intact, because Meta will at least pretend to care that you get rehired someplace. For all Elons talk about caring about human being he sure seems to rage-hate many of them.

    • Meta has employed many tech workers. Their skills will be absorbed in broader market but slowly due to broader tech tightening. Pay levels will decline for many as well. Unfortunately the work at Meta is not generating the cash required to pay them. Maybe they can start their own companies sell up later.
    • by nazrhyn ( 906126 )
      The only person who can allow your dignity to be taken is you.

      (The general "you", not you, the poster.)
  • by zarmanto ( 884704 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2023 @09:23AM (#63349959) Journal

    ... Meta ... has been asking directors and vice presidents to make lists of employees that can be let go

    Whoever these unidentified individuals at the top are (above director/VP) that are asking for lists, they themselves should obviously be at the top of those list. Firing even one of these top executives would save the jobs of dozens or possibly even hundreds of other workers who simply can't afford to lose their barely-making-ends-meet job. And given that all that "Mr. Meta" seems able to do is ask for lists... no real value would be lost.

    Sorry... did I voice my unrealistic expectations again? /s

    • Thank God I'm certain nobody at the top even knows my name!
    • Firing even one of these top executives would save the jobs of dozens or possibly even hundreds of other workers who simply can't afford to lose their barely-making-ends-meet job.

      The goal of a job is to do a job, not to exist purely for pay. Meta went insanely overboard in hiring in 2021/22 to the point where even after the layoffs of 11000 people they still finished the year with record employee number growth.

      If you are suggesting that we should fire management to pay for employees who have nothing to do then I think we can all be thankful you're not running a company. ... Or actually we should promote you to Facebook management since it sounds like you'd sink the company very quic

  • by Vandil X ( 636030 ) on Tuesday March 07, 2023 @09:46AM (#63350025)
    People have been trying to promote the VR headset idea since The Lawnmower Man. In reality, putting on a VR headset for an hour of gaming is about the length of time before the novelty goes away and you want to take the thing off. No one wants to pot on a VR headset and hang out with people for hours on end, walking in virtual malls, shopping in virtual stores for real goods, and doing their banking in a miserable VR branch. Beatsaber for 30 minutes is one thing. Sitting in a virtual teller line for 3 minutes is not.

    VR's a dead end, and Meta bet the company on it.

    Then comes the fact that Facebook is no longer "cool". The teens and 20s have moved on to other social media. Facebook is now the local bulletin board and replacement for posting garage sales and local buy/sell ads. And maybe somewhere in all that you post vacation photos and keep track of friends, family, and people you knew in high school and college. It's a glorified yearbook of life past and present with classified ad functionality.

    The age group that uses Facebook probably doesn't click on the ads much, nor care to wear a VR headset.

    Instagram is trying really hard to be TikTok Too. Even going so far as relaxing guidelines so people can post softcore/risqué content to gain an audience. I guess they want to police what they consider "disinformation" but nipple videos plainly viewable by kids are ok.

    Meta has problems, and now they're ripping them apart.
    • Nope. Seriously, there are people who will hang out for hours on end in VR. Not kidding. But that market is very specific and these people also have a very specific reason why they like it.

      We're talking about Furries and Cosplayers here. Why do they like VR? Obvious reason: They can finally "be" what they want to pretend to be. They can be that fantasy creature they always dreamed to be. And others will see them as that fantasy creature and interact with them as if they actually were that fantasy creature.

      T

    • VR's a dead end, and Meta bet the company on it.

      Meta sunk a paltry $13billion into it, less than 10% of revenue invested in R&D and still made over $20billion on profit. They didn't bet the company on it. They put a bit of R&D into it funded by their core business.

      That said VR isn't a dead end. You said it yourself people will spend an hour on it. That is a glowing review in a world where most people spend far less than an hour on any given day playing a console. Sure there are plenty of gamers who put far more hours into games, but there are lik

    • No one wants to pot on a VR headset and hang out with people for hours on end

      I predict the future will prove you wrong. The problem is that the tech isn't very good yet. VR headsets need to be very lightweight (not much more than an ordinary pair of glasses), high resolution and have near perfect synchronization between physical and in-game movement.

    • Funny, my kids haven't touched Roblox ever since they got to jump in Gorilla Tag...

  • > In the end this will spell more wealth for all.

    And I'm Superman. (Yes, I look terrific in those tights.)

    The plutocrats won't give up their wealth without a well-funded fight.

  • Yep. Managers laid off? Don't make me laugh. Who'll get laid off are developers, and software testers. I mean, based on faceplant, they don't use any of the latter.

    • They don't need them. No really. After the last round of layoffs Meta still had record employee growth at a time where their products themselves stagnated. I think they hired people because it was the cool thing to do at the time and now they are realising that the people they hired were sitting around twiddling their thumbs. Meta has been hurting as a company the past few years, so this is nothing more than a course correction for a company that shouldn't have been going on a hiring spree in the first plac

Competence, like truth, beauty, and contact lenses, is in the eye of the beholder. -- Dr. Laurence J. Peter

Working...