Meta is poised to significantly reduce its staff after previously cutting its personnel by over 21,000 workers. The firm will begin more layoffs on Wednesday, according to a Vox report that quoted an internal memo that was posted to a Meta discussion board on Tuesday. The message also stated that a variety of technical teams, including those working on Facebook, Instagram, Reality Labs, and WhatsApp, would be impacted by these job layoffs, as they had been in Meta’s prior rounds. According to a person who spoke with Vox, there could be up to 4,000 job layoffs.
Employees of Meta in North America will be informed by email on Wednesday between 4 and 5 a.m. Pacific Time, or 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. in India. However, depending on the country, the timing might not be uniform, and some nations might not even be affected. Additionally, the business is requesting that North American workers work remotely on Wednesday if at all possible so that they can have “space to process the news.” “This will be a difficult time as we say goodbye to friends and colleagues who have contributed so much to Meta,” Meta’s Head of People, Lori Goler, said in the memo.
Meta is joined by Amazon, which on Tuesday, also began laying off some employees in its advertising wing
Since November 2022, Meta, the organization that owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, has begun laying off employees. 11,000 employees from several departments were impacted by the first wave in November. Mark Zuckerberg made the second round of job cuts public in March, announcing that the business would be eliminating 10,000 more positions in the coming weeks. The layoffs, he continued, were a part of a “year of efficiency” that was aimed at enhancing the business’s financial performance in a challenging climate.
The whole IT sector overestimated the pandemic’s dramatic increase in demand for goods and services and embarked on a hiring binge. But when the pandemic subsided, Russia invaded Ukraine, and central banks all over the world raised the alarm about an imminent recession, among other things, that quickly fizzled out. Companies like Meta are currently cutting costs and tightening their belts in response to the bad macroeconomic conditions. One of these entails firing thousands of workers. Meta is joined by Amazon, which on Tuesday, also began laying off some employees in its advertising wing as part of the company’s cost-cutting measures.