Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Mark Zuckerberg, and Other Tech CEOs Discuss Why Companies Are Implementing Workforce Reductions

Tech industry leaders such as Google, Microsoft, and Meta are implementing job cuts in 2024 due to various reasons like over-hiring during the pandemic, restructuring for AI focus, and adapting to a changing economic landscape. Companies are prioritizing efficiency and reallocation of resources.

Read More

Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Mark Zuckerberg and other tech CEOs on why companies are making job cuts

The tech industry’s layoffs haven’t stopped. After starting in 2023, many companies like Google, Microsoft, Facebook parent Meta and Amazon, among others, are still cutting jobs in 2024. Recently, Microsoft laid off a bunch of people in product and program management roles, impacting multiple teams and geographies. Notably, despite these cuts, major tech companies keep releasing new artificial intelligence (AI) features and products.
Here we have listed a few reasons that CEOs of these tech giants have provided for job cuts.

Facebook parent Meta’s move towards “year of efficiency”

The parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp is among the first tech giants that announced job cuts. On the first round of industry-wide layoffs, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in an interview with “Morning Brew Daily” in February that the company overhired during the pandemic and later realised the benefits of a leaner workforce, leading to more layoffs.
Thousands of employees were laid off in Zuckerberg’s “year of efficiency,” in 2023.

“It was obviously really tough. We parted with a lot of talented people we cared about. But in some ways, actually becoming leaner kind of makes the company more effective,” Zuckerberg said in the interview. (via Business Insider)

Job cuts due to “different economic reality”: Google CEO Sundar Pichai

For Google there are multiple reasons, and also conducted multiple rounds of layoffs, with most recent being in its Cloud unit at the end of May.
In 2023, Google CEO Sundar Pichai said that the company experienced “dramatic growth” during the pandemic, leading to hiring “for a different economic reality” than what was last year. Then in May this year, Pichai told Bloomberg that the company is removing some teams completely to “improve velocity.”

He pointed out that the first half of the year will see more job cuts, which will be at a slower pace in the second half.
He noted that the company is also “reallocating people” to its “highest priorities”, which include AI projects, like the creation of ARM-based CPUs, development as well as implementation of Gemini across Google and Google Workspace apps.

Microsoft cut jobs for restructuring and investments in key areas

Google isn’t the only one to restructure its workforce to make room for AI – its AI rival Microsoft also has ‘blamed’ the new technology for job cuts.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in a memo last year said the company while consumers are also optimising their digital spends, the onset of new technology is forcing the company to take such a stand.
“First, as we saw customers accelerate their digital spend during the pandemic, we’re now seeing them optimise their digital spend to do more with less. At the same time, the next major wave of computing is being born with advances in AI, as we’re turning the world’s most advanced models into a new computing platform,” Nadella said, adding that the company will continue to hire in “key strategic areas.”

Layoffs at IBM, Salesforce and other companies

In May 2023, IBM CEO Arvind Krishna predicted AI and automation replacing 30% of HR and non-customer facing roles within five years. The company laid off employees in March 2024.
Discord CEO Jason Citron mentioned in a January memo that the company’s workforce had grown five times since 2020 – which may be linked to recent layoffs.
Just like Zuckerberg, Salesforce chief executive Marc Benioff blamed over-hiring during the pandemic for layoffs in 2023. He stated revenue grew, but the economic downturn required a smaller workforce.
Dropbox CEO Drew Houston, in a 2023 layoff announcement, said their next phase needed a different skill set focused on AI and early-stage product development.

Related Posts

Lucy and Stephen Are Back to Wrecking Lives in Tell Me Lies Season 3—Hulu’s Just Dropped the Date, and It’s a Chaos-Fueled Valentine from Hell!

The notification hits your phone like a sucker punch from an ex you can’t quit: Tell Me Lies Season 3 premieres January 13, 2026. Hulu’s not playing…

Kimmie faked her grave, Antoine sold his soul, and now Mr. & Mrs. Smith 2.0 are reloading for a blood-soaked honeymoon in Beauty in Black S3—Tyler Perry just turned betrayal into a vow renewal!

The screen explodes in a hail of glass and gunfire, and there she is—Kimmie, eyes blazing, lips curled into the smirk that fooled death itself. Season 3…

Sarah Snook swaps boardroom knives for suburban nightmares in All Her Fault—the 8-episode thriller that’s got viewers screaming “best show of the year” before the credits even roll.

The final seconds of the premiere episode fade to black, and your living room falls silent except for the thud of your own heartbeat. That’s the All…

Love. Lies. Revenge. Culpa Nuestra Brings Noah & Nick Back Together — But One Crash Changes Everything 😱🚗

On October 16, 2025, Amazon Prime Video unleashed Culpa Nuestra (Our Fault), the third and final chapter of the Culpables trilogy, and the internet hasn’t stopped buzzing…

At 13, She Lost Her Family to War — My Name Is Sara Tells the True Story of a Girl Who Survived by Becoming Someone Else 😢🕊️

A single photograph changed everything. It was 1992, in a war-torn village on the edge of the Balkans, and 13-year-old Sara Hadžić stood in the ruins of…

The Masks Are Coming Off — Beauty in Black Season 3 Turns Fashion’s Brightest Runway Into Its Darkest Battlefield 😈💄

The lights of Atlanta’s high-fashion empire flicker like a dying star in the newly dropped official trailer for Beauty in Black Season 3, premiering February 14, 2026,…