Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's goodbye message to 8,000 fired employees also has two promises for the 70,000 who survived layoffs
Mark Zuckerberg's email landed in 78,000 inboxes on Wednesday morning, just as the first wave of layoff notices began going out in Singapore at 4 a.m. local time. To the roughly 8,000 employees losing their jobs, the Meta chief executive offered gratitude. To everyone else—the people still logged in, still wondering whether next month brings another round—he offered something rarer at the company right now: two specific promises. No more company-wide layoffs this year. And an acknowledgement, finally, that Meta has handled the run-up to all of this badly.
The cuts amount to roughly 10 percent of Meta's workforce. Notifications rolled out in three waves at 4 AM local time across regions on May 20, starting in Asia, then Europe, then the Americas. US staff are getting 16 weeks of severance plus two weeks for every year worked, along with 18 months of COBRA health coverage. Another 7,000 employees are being reassigned to new AI projects. Around 6,000 open roles are being scrapped.
The second promise read more like an admission. Zuckerberg conceded that Meta had not been as clear in its communication as it should have been, and said he wanted that to improve. For people who spent four weeks not knowing whether their job still existed, the line carried weight—even if it arrived a month late.
Also read: Unfortunately, your role has been eliminated as part of ... Meta leadership in '4 am email' to laid-off employees
That isn't the language of a company that has finished restructuring. Meta is spending between $125 billion and $145 billion on capital expenditure this year—nearly double its 2025 spend—with most of it pouring into data centres, custom chips and model training for Meta Superintelligence Labs. The 8,000 jobs being cut are explicitly meant to offset that bill. Meta's stock dropped 6 percent after the earnings call.
Workers have been responding to layoff posts on internal forums with salad emojis, a workaround for "salute." At least three employee-built websites have been counting down to May 20, one of them titled "Big Beautiful Layoff." In New York, hundreds of staff gathered at a bar on Tuesday night for an event whose invitation read: "Never a dull moment."
Inside the surviving organisation, a new team led by engineering vice president Maher Saba—called Applied AI and Engineering—has absorbed around 2,000 employees. Each manager oversees roughly 50 reports. Internally, some staff have started referring to the team as "the Draft." Joining it was not optional. To retain at least one director-level employee, Meta dangled an additional $500,000 in equity, according to people familiar with the offer.
Zuckerberg closed his memo with a familiar pitch. "Success isn't a given. AI is the most consequential technology of our lifetimes," he wrote. For the 70,000 employees still logged in, though, the promises that matter aren't really about the next generation. They're about whether the next four weeks will look anything like the last four—and whether the stability Zuckerberg promised this year holds longer than that.
What CEO Mark Zuckerberg told Meta employees who kept their jobs
Zuckerberg wrote that Meta did "not expect other company-wide layoffs this year"—the closest thing to a stability guarantee anyone at the company has heard in months. The memo's contents were first published by The New York Times. Since the layoffs were initially flagged on April 23, employees have been working in what staffers described as a holding pattern, checking the internal directory, scavenging laptop chargers and free snacks, signing petitions.The second promise read more like an admission. Zuckerberg conceded that Meta had not been as clear in its communication as it should have been, and said he wanted that to improve. For people who spent four weeks not knowing whether their job still existed, the line carried weight—even if it arrived a month late.
Also read: Unfortunately, your role has been eliminated as part of ... Meta leadership in '4 am email' to laid-off employees
Meta's $145 billion AI bill is the real reason 8,000 jobs are going
The no-more-layoffs commitment comes with a footnote written by Meta's own CFO. On the company's Q1 earnings call on April 29, finance chief Susan Li told analysts she doesn't know what Meta's ideal headcount actually looks like anymore. Zuckerberg made the trade-off explicit on the same call. If a team used to need 50 or 100 people and now needs 10, he said, keeping the bigger team around becomes counterproductive.That isn't the language of a company that has finished restructuring. Meta is spending between $125 billion and $145 billion on capital expenditure this year—nearly double its 2025 spend—with most of it pouring into data centres, custom chips and model training for Meta Superintelligence Labs. The 8,000 jobs being cut are explicitly meant to offset that bill. Meta's stock dropped 6 percent after the earnings call.
Inside Meta's layoff week: petitions, 'the Draft' and rock-bottom morale
The mood inside the company has been bleak for weeks. Internal sentiment on the anonymous workplace site Blind is at its lowest on record. More than 1,500 employees have signed a petition demanding Meta stop tracking their keystrokes, mouse movements and screen activity to train AI models—a program internally called the Model Capability Initiative. Flyers promoting the petition have been taped to office windows in New York. When an employee asked CTO Andrew Bosworth how to opt out of the tracking, the answer was that there was no opt-out.Workers have been responding to layoff posts on internal forums with salad emojis, a workaround for "salute." At least three employee-built websites have been counting down to May 20, one of them titled "Big Beautiful Layoff." In New York, hundreds of staff gathered at a bar on Tuesday night for an event whose invitation read: "Never a dull moment."
Inside the surviving organisation, a new team led by engineering vice president Maher Saba—called Applied AI and Engineering—has absorbed around 2,000 employees. Each manager oversees roughly 50 reports. Internally, some staff have started referring to the team as "the Draft." Joining it was not optional. To retain at least one director-level employee, Meta dangled an additional $500,000 in equity, according to people familiar with the offer.
Zuckerberg closed his memo with a familiar pitch. "Success isn't a given. AI is the most consequential technology of our lifetimes," he wrote. For the 70,000 employees still logged in, though, the promises that matter aren't really about the next generation. They're about whether the next four weeks will look anything like the last four—and whether the stability Zuckerberg promised this year holds longer than that.
Comments (85)
j
johngrabowksiMost Interacted
6 days ago
Zuckerberg is ALWAYS saying, whether it's to employees or Congress, that he hasn't been too clear about something in the past and ...Read More
9 Replies
3
2
Reply
Popular from Technology
- After telling Amazon users that if we ran Amazon like New York City runs its School system, packages would take weeks to reach; Jeff Bezos now tells New York mayor: Best way to put money in people's pockets is ...
- One of Denmark's biggest pension fund blacklists IPO of Elon Musk's Spacex, says: Is grossly ...
- Hundreds of faculty members of University of California sign open letter on Maths and Science papers; says: We call for the reinstatement of
- Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella's Copilot ‘confusion fix’ that left employees laughing in townhall may come at Build developer conference in the form of …
- Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's goodbye message to 8,000 fired employees also has two promises for the 70,000 who survived layoffs
end of article
Trending Stories
- US-Israel-Iran War News Live Updates: Iran unveils fast attack boat '27 Rajab' capable of launching cruise missiles
- Ghaziabad 'Bakrid invite' murder: Main accused Asad shot dead in encounter
- RCB vs GT IPL 2026 Final: What happens if rain washes out title clash in Ahmedabad?
- IPL Final Match Today: Rajat Patidar's RCB vs Shubman Gill's GT - Predicted playing XI, head-to-head, toss timing, pitch report, Ahmedabad weather update
- RCB vs GT: Kohli vs Siraj, Gill vs Bhuvneshwar - Five key player battles that could decide IPL 2026 final
- End of an era for Air India colonies in Mumbai’s Kalina as last of the occupants leave
- Maharashtra: 80 lakh women removed from Ladki Bahin scheme as e-KYC deadline ends; govt rules out new enrolments
Featured in technology
- One of Denmark's biggest pension fund blacklists IPO of Elon Musk's Spacex, says: Is grossly ...
- Google’s Gemini Spark now live for AI Ultra users in US: here’s what it can do
- AMD CEO Lisa Su shares the advice from an IBM executive that convinced her to join a struggling company: ‘I was …’
- Nvidia CFO Colette Kress at company's earnings call: AI is no longer nice-to-have as ...
- Anthropic updates list of firms accused of unauthorized share transactions
- As $2 billion-plus software company Wix lays off 1,000 employees; CEO Avishai Abrahami says in memo: I am confident it is the right decision, and ...
Photostories
- Born on a Thursday? What it reveals about your personality, money, love and future
- 5 Best plants to grow in UK gardens this June for a vibrant summer display
- Jacob Elordi's best work to watch on OTT: 'Euphoria', 'Saltburn', and more
- "I eat...at least 300 days a year." PM Modi's daily diet includes this superfood: 6 ways you can enjoy it too
- Morning vs evening watering: Which is better for your plants during extreme summer heat and why it matters
- 5 times Robert Downey Jr. inspired us to practice yoga
- 7 traditional Indian house names that still sound elegant, auspicious, and timeless
- Gum bleeding, mouth ulcers, bad breath: Early oral cancer signs tobacco users often ignore
- 8 Tier-II cities emerging as real estate investment powerhouses
- This hill town is the most ‘peaceful’ in India: 5 reasons why travellers are choosing silence over anything else
Up Next
Follow Us On Social Media