Exclusive-Meta planning sweeping layoffs as AI costs mount

Exclusive-Meta planning sweeping layoffs as AI costs mount

By Katie Paul, Jeff Horwitz and Deepa Seetharaman

Reuters

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO, March 13 (Reuters) - Meta is planning sweeping layoffs that could affect 20% or more of the company, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as ‌Meta seeks to offset costlyartificial intelligenceinfrastructure bets and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted ‌workers.

No date has been set for the cuts and the magnitude has not been finalized, the people said.

Top executives have recently signaled the plans to other ​senior leaders at Meta and told them to begin planning how to pare back, two of the people said. The sources spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to disclose the cuts.

Meta did not immediately comment.

If Meta settles on the 20% figure, the layoffs will be the company's most significant since a restructuring in late 2022 and early 2023 that it dubbed the "year of efficiency." ‌It employed nearly 79,000 people as of ⁠December 31, according to its latest filing.

The company laid off 11,000 staffers in November 2022, or around 13% of its workforce at the time. Around four months later, it announced it was cutting ⁠another 10,000 jobs.

ZUCKERBERG FOCUSING ON GENERATIVE AI

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Over the last year, CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been pushing Meta to compete more forcefully in generative AI. The company has offered huge pay packages, some worth hundreds of millions of dollars over four years, to court top AI ​researchers ​to a new superintelligence team.

The company has said it plans to invest $600 ​billion to build data centers by 2028. Earlier ‌this week, it acquired Moltbook, a social networking platform built for AI agents. Meta is also spending at least $2 billion to buy Chinese AI startup Manus, Reuters previously reported.

Zuckerberg has alluded to efficiency gains from the investments, saying in January he was starting to see "projects that used to require big teams now be accomplished by a single very talented person."

Meta's plans reflect a broader pattern among major U.S. companies, particularly in tech, this year. Executives have pointed to recent improvements in AI systems as one ‌reason for the changes.

In January, Amazon confirmed it would cut some 16,000 ​jobs, amounting to nearly 10% of its workforce. Last month, the fintech ​company Block chopped nearly half of its staff, with ​CEO Jack Dorsey explicitly pointing to AI tools and their growing capability to help companies do ‌more with smaller teams.

Meta's planned AI investments follow a ​series of setbacks with its ​Llama 4 models last year, including criticism that it provided misleading results on the benchmarks it used for early versions. It abandoned the release of the largest version of that model, called Behemoth, which had been due out ​in the summer.

The superintelligence team has been ‌working to reassert the company's standing this year by building a new model called Avocado, but the performance ​of that model has also lagged expectations.

(Reporting by Deepa Seetharaman and Jeff Horwitz in San Francisco and Katie ​Paul in New York; editing by Kenneth Li, Rod Nickel)

 

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