عاجل
FRDeux explosions près de l'hôtel où Emmanuel Macron a passé la nuit à DamasFRBaccalauréat 2026 : les résultats tombent dans plusieurs académies, suivez notre directFRRussie revendique la prise de Kostyantynivka, des dirigeants étrangers aux funérailles de KhameneiFRProcès des streameurs Naruto et Safine : réquisitions de prison et amendeFRArthur Fery, le franco-britannique, crée la surprise en quart de finale de WimbledonFROasis : un documentaire sur les coulisses de leur tournée de retrouvailles annoncéFRPont Chaban-Delmas: Nouveau dysfonctionnement, le départ du Belem annuléFRSaint-Avold : un conseiller RN démissionne après avoir chanté "Maréchal nous voilà"FRParaguay senator's racist tweet against Mbappé sparks international outcryFRAéroport de Marseille: reprise partielle du trafic attendue à partir de 21h30FRDeux explosions près de l'hôtel où Emmanuel Macron a passé la nuit à DamasFRBaccalauréat 2026 : les résultats tombent dans plusieurs académies, suivez notre directFRRussie revendique la prise de Kostyantynivka, des dirigeants étrangers aux funérailles de KhameneiFRProcès des streameurs Naruto et Safine : réquisitions de prison et amendeFRArthur Fery, le franco-britannique, crée la surprise en quart de finale de WimbledonFROasis : un documentaire sur les coulisses de leur tournée de retrouvailles annoncéFRPont Chaban-Delmas: Nouveau dysfonctionnement, le départ du Belem annuléFRSaint-Avold : un conseiller RN démissionne après avoir chanté "Maréchal nous voilà"FRParaguay senator's racist tweet against Mbappé sparks international outcryFRAéroport de Marseille: reprise partielle du trafic attendue à partir de 21h30
Newsgather
BackTech Layoffs Surge: AI Cited as Key Driver Amid Record Revenues
Tech Layoffs Surge: AI Cited as Key Driver Amid Record Revenues
يتطور
TechCrunch23.06.2026Business6 dk okumaUnited States

Tech Layoffs Surge: AI Cited as Key Driver Amid Record Revenues

نظرة سريعة

  • Major tech companies, including Oracle, Google, Meta, and Microsoft, have announced significant workforce reductions, totaling tens of thousands of jobs.
  • AI adoption is frequently cited as the primary reason for these layoffs, even as companies report record revenues and invest heavily in AI infrastructure.

ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي

لماذا يهم

Major tech companies are increasingly citing AI adoption as a reason for workforce reductions, even as they report record revenues. This trend raises questions about the true drivers of these layoffs, particularly concerning jobs hired during the pandemic surge.

حجم الخط

Oracle disclosed Monday that it has reduced its workforce by 21,000 employees over the past 12 months, a decline of 13%, which means more cuts than was previously known, including jobs eliminated because of AI. “The adoption and deployment of AI technologies across our operations have resulted, and may continue to result, in reductions to our workforce,” the company said in an annual financial regulatory filing.

The revelation puts new numbers to what feels to many in the tech industry like an epidemic: companies reporting record revenues while simultaneously culling their workforces, pointing to AI as both the engine of growth and the reason for the cuts. Tech layoffs hit their highest single month in years in May, and AI was the most-cited reason, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

We recently wrote about why that rationale is something companies may want to rethink, not least because for many of these companies, the headcount they’re now cutting was hired during the pandemic hiring surge, raising questions about what’s really going on. Below, a running look — in reverse chronological order — at the bigger tech companies that have announced significant layoffs this year with AI as a stated factor.

GitLab — June 3, 2026. In one of the most recent cuts on this list, GitLab laid off roughly 350 workers, about 14% of its staff, to fund AI infrastructure investment and handle surging traffic from AI workflows. CEO Bill Staples said agentic workloads are “pushing competitors to the brink” and that the company had begun a “generational rebuild” of its core infrastructure to support what he called 100x growth requirements. GitLab is exiting 22 countries, flattening management layers, and partnering with an unspecified AI lab to rebuild its platform for agent-scale workloads. The company reported first-quarter revenue of $264 million, up 23% year-over-year, and expects to incur $30 to $35 million in restructuring costs.

Google — ongoing through May. Alphabet’s Google has quietly cut employees across its Cloud division, including its Threat Intelligence Group and Mandiant-linked cybersecurity staff, even as Cloud revenue grew 63% to exceed $20 billion for the first time and its backlog nearly doubled to over $460 billion. Over the past year, Google has cut more than a third of the managers overseeing small teams — 35% fewer managers with fewer direct reports. Unlike most companies on this list, Google has never announced a single overall number — the cuts have come through a rolling performance review process, a voluntary buyout program, and structural reorganizations, with outside estimates putting the 2026 total at between 1,500 and 3,000+ engineers.

Intuit — May 20, 2026. Intuit announced plans to eliminate roughly 3,000 jobs — about 17% of its total workforce — in a restructuring centered on reducing complexity and reallocating resources toward AI. CEO Sasan Goodarzi reportedly told staff the company is reducing complexity and simplifying the structure, so it can deliver better products.

Meta — May 20-21, 2026. Meta laid off about 8,000 employees, roughly 10% of its workforce, while moving about 7,000 employees into new AI-focused roles (that they reportedly hate). Zuckerberg told staff the cuts were necessary because “success isn’t a given” in AI.

Cisco — May 14, 2026. Cisco announced it’s cutting nearly 4,000 jobs, about 5% of its workforce, despite reporting better-than-expected profit and revenue. CFO Mark Patterson said: “This was really not a savings-driven restructure… this is more [about] realigning … resources around silicon, optics, security and AI.”

Cloudflare — May 7-8, 2026. Cloudflare cut about 20% of its workforce (1,100 people), reporting quarterly revenue of $639.8 million, up 34% year-over-year and the highest single quarter in company history. CEO Matthew Prince wrote that “the vast majority of those we laid off last week were measurers” — middle management, finance, legal, internal auditing, and revenue recognition.

General Motors — May 12, 2026. GM eliminated 500 to 600 jobs, largely in IT roles in Austin, Texas, and Warren, Michigan, saying it was reevaluating its workforce needs amid uncertain market conditions. A person familiar with the cuts told CNBC that AI played a role in the decision but that it wasn’t the only reason. GM’s statement said it was “transforming its Information Technology organization to better position the company for the future.” Despite the cuts, the company still had roughly 80 open IT positions, including roles in AI, motorsports, and autonomous vehicles.

Coinbase — May 5, 2026. The crypto exchange said it was cutting about 700 employees, or 14% of its staff, as part of a restructuring aimed at addressing market volatility and increasing AI efficiency. The company flattened its organizational structure to five layers below the CEO and COO, and said it would experiment with “one-person teams” combining engineering, design, and product roles. CEO Brian Armstrong wrote that AI had changed the pace of work dramatically — “engineers use AI to ship in days what used to take a team weeks” — and that the company needed to “leverage AI across every facet of our jobs.”

PayPal — May 5, 2026. PayPal announced plans to cut around 20% of its workforce over the next two to three years — north of 4,500 jobs — as part of a turnaround strategy centered on AI adoption and organizational simplification. CEO Enrique Lores told investors the company would “aggressively adopt AI” in its development processes and formed a new “AI transformation and simplification” team reporting directly to him, tasked with redesigning the company’s processes “function by function.” Lores framed the cuts as removing organizational layers, and said AI would extend well beyond coding into customer service, support operations, and risk management.

Microsoft — April-May 2026. Microsoft offered buyouts structured as voluntary separations, without disclosing how many employees these would impact. CFO Amy Hood said total headcount declined year-over-year in fiscal Q3, and is expected to keep declining as the company focuses on “building high-performing teams that operate with pace and agility” amid rising AI investment.

Snap — April 16, 2026. Snap cut roughly 16% of its global workforce — about 1,000 full-time employees — and closed more than 300 open roles, with CEO Evan Spiegel citing AI advancements as a key driver. “Rapid advancements in artificial intelligence enable our teams to reduce repetitive work, increase velocity, and better support our community, partners, and advertisers,” Spiegel wrote in a memo filed with the SEC. The company said it had already seen small squads using AI tools to drive progress across Snapchat+, ad platform performance, and infrastructure efficiency.

IBM — rolling through 2026. Between Q4 2025 cuts and April 2026 Red Hat engineering reductions, estimates range from 3,000 to 9,000 U.S. positions eliminated, bringing IBM’s cumulative total since September 2024 above 15,000. Bloomberg reported IBM plans to triple its U.S. entry-level hiring for AI and hybrid-cloud roles, even as roughly 200 HR positions were replaced by AI agents. An IBM spokesperson described the Q4 2025 round as a routine rebalancing affecting “a low single-digit percentage” of its global workforce.

Atlassian — March 11, 2026. Atlassian cut about 1,600 jobs (10% of its workforce) to “rebalance” toward AI and enterprise sales, even as shares rose nearly 2% on the news. CEO Mike Cannon-Brookes said: “Our approach is not ‘AI replaces people.’ But it would be disingenuous to pretend AI doesn’t change the mix of skills we need or the number of roles required in certain areas. It does.”

Dell — Jan 30 (though disclosed in March 2026). Dell’s total workforce fell about 10% in fiscal 2026 — roughly 11,000 jobs — to about 97,000 employees from 108,000 a year earlier, with $569 million spent on severance. The cuts came as Dell projected its AI-optimized server revenue could double in fiscal 2027.

Oracle — March 5-31, 2026. As noted above, Oracle began telling employees it would be cutting thousands of jobs via terminal emails. The cuts came even as Oracle posted $3.7 billion in quarterly net income, up 27% year-over-year, with remaining performance obligations up 325% to $553 billion — savings redirected toward AI data centers. The cuts that would later total 21,000 over 12 months, as Oracle disclosed in its June 22 annual filing.

ما الذي يجب مراقبته

توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق

  • Further tech layoffs citing AI will continue in the next 6-12 months.

    مرجح جداً · خلال أشهر

  • Increased demand for AI-specific skills in the tech job market.

    مرجح جداً · خلال أشهر

أسئلة مفتوحة

  • What is the long-term impact of AI on tech employment?
  • Are companies genuinely reallocating talent or simply cutting costs?
  • How will these cuts affect innovation and company culture?

مواضيع ذات صلة

This article was originally published by TechCrunch.

أخبار ذات صلة

المزيد حول هذا الموضوعlayoffs