In response to “a changing economic reality,” Google parent Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O) announced in a staff message that it is eliminating around 12,000 jobs, doubling focus on artificial intelligence (AI), and firing employees who support experimental initiatives.
The layoffs at tech behemoths including Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O), Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O), and Meta Platforms Inc (META.O), who are shrinking after a pandemic-driven hiring spree left them flabby in a poor economy, affect 6% of their staff.
On Friday, Alphabet stock increased 4% after the Mountain View, California-based company announced a roughly third increase in personnel through 2020 and 2021. They had decreased by 30% over the previous year, mirroring a 24% decline in the larger technology industry (.IXIC).
Alphabet’s current CEO, Sundar Pichai, stated in the memo released on Friday that he accepted “full responsibility” for the decisions that resulted in the layoffs.
As Alphabet sought to infuse its products with more AI, Pichai, whose pay was recently more closely correlated with performance, said that this was an opportunity to “sharpen our focus, reengineer our cost base and direct our talent and capital to our highest priorities,” echoing remarks from Microsoft that announced job cuts on Wednesday.
Microsoft is apparently trying to increase its stake in ChatGPT, a promising chatbot that provides responses that are human-like, putting pressure on Alphabet, a longtime leader in AI.
Meanwhile, businesses are cutting budgets for advertising, Alphabet’s primary source of income, while consumers reduce their spending.
According to Susannah Streeter, an analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, “it is evident that Alphabet is not exempt from the difficult economic background, with worries about a U.S. recession mounting.”
The rate of ad growth has slowed down. “Competition is also heating up, with Alphabet facing a formidable rival in TikTok, and Instagram also battling for its vital YouTube subscribers,” Streeter added, stressing that Alphabet has also accrued billions in regulatory fines.
Alphabet’s record-high headcount, according to Evercore ISIS analyst Mark Mahaney, had posed significant margin risk going into fiscal 2023, and according to Bernstein analyst Mark Shmulik, employee cuts may save the business $2.5 billion to $3 billion in expenses.
With Alphabet’s staff reductions, the recent employment losses at four of the largest U.S. internet corporations have reached 51,000. Even while the U.S. job market is still tight, they have increased worries about a recession.
According to Stuart Cole, an economist at Equiti Capital, the tech industry is somewhat like the proverbial canary in the coal mine because layoffs there signal that the prognosis for job security is finally starting to turn more unfavourable.
Apple (AAPL.O), which hired more cautiously throughout the pandemic, has so far refrained from making any cuts. However, the AppleInsider website said on Friday, citing sources, that the iPhone maker had begun to fire non-seasonal staff members from its retail channel, including Best Buy (BBY.N) locations.
LIGHT COMFORT
According to two people familiar with the situation, Alphabet has been working on a significant AI launch. It would happen in the spring, according to one of the sources. The New York Times also noted that Google intended to introduce more than 20 new products, including a chatbot-enabled search engine.
According to Pichai, employees working on engineering and product teams, corporate workers, and recruiters are among those losing their employment. The majority of positions at Google’s internal incubator for new initiatives, Area 120, have been eliminated, a corporate spokesperson told Reuters.
The company’s leadership accepting “full responsibility,” according to the Alphabet Workers Union, was of “little consolation.”
The union added, “It’s disgusting that our jobs are the first to go so shareholders can see a few more points in a chart next quarter.”
Employees in the US who are affected will receive severance, six months of healthcare, as well as assistance with immigration (Alphabet has already emailed affected employees).
Layoff notifications will take longer abroad due to regional employment rules and customs, according to Pichai’s memo. Starting in February, employees in Asia will be informed whether the cut affects them.