The possible cuts come as tightened advertiser budgets and Apple’s iOS privacy changes have weighed on Meta’s core business as it posted its second quarterly revenue decline last month and reported that profits were half of the prior year's. The drop in profitability is largely driven by the billions Meta is spending to build a future version of the Internet called the metaverse that likely remains years away.
While job cut reports didn't negatively impact Meta as its stock opened more than 5% higher on Monday morning. It had boasted market capitalization of more than $1 trillion last year but dropped to about $250 billion today.
On a conference call last month to discuss its earnings results for the third quarter, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that he expects the company to end 2023 “as either roughly the same size, or even a slightly smaller organization than we are today”.
Meta is far from the only tech company said to be rethinking staffing. In a stunning shift for an industry sometimes thought of as untouchable, a number of tech companies have announced hiring freezes or job cuts in recent months, often after having seen rapid growth during the pandemic.
Last week, rideshare company Lyft said it was axing 13% of employees, and payment-processing firm Stripe said it was cutting 14% of its staff. The same day, e-commerce giant Amazon said it was implementing a pause on corporate hiring.
Facebook-rival Twitter made sweeping cuts across the company on Friday under its new owner, Elon Musk. The cuts impacted its ethical AI, marketing and communication, search and public policy teams, among other departments. In the days since, however, Twitter has reportedly asked dozens of laid off employees to return, according to Bloomberg.
Meta declined to comment on the report.
