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Unknown: Hi, Bernie. Hi. Thanks for meeting with me. And Rosie.
We have an important meeting today. We finished our
evaluations of 2023 performance. This is where you have not met
Cloudflare expectations for performance. We've decided to
part ways with you. Yeah,
I'm gonna stop right there.
This is a viral video posted by Brittany Pietsch, a former
employee of CloudFlare, a San Francisco based tech company.
The video posted on January 2024, and got so much attention
that it may have kicked off a new sub genre of viral video
watch this person get laid off in real time. The tech industry
is again seeing widespread layoffs after a rough 2023
LinkedIn just
laid off nearly 700 employees. Qualcomm is planning to cut more
than 1200 jobs Google
Amazon and Snap are among the companies continuing to downsize
in the start of 2024 seems no different as layoff
announcements, especially in the tech industry continue to make
headlines.
Units affected they also include hardware engineering, ad sales
so far last night CEO Sundar Pichai told his workforce to
expect more cuts
Kate Rooney: and Amazon spokesperson did confirm those
layoffs ahead of prime and prime video and MGM saying in that
memo that the company is making some of the cuts to prioritize
investments for the long term. layoffs
Unknown: are also plaguing industries like healthcare,
banking and media, whoever the tech industry is the one that's
been dominating the headlines. This
Devyn Rafols-Nunez: layoff and everything that's happened in
tech, I think is pretty eye opening. You know, like, you can
have your dream job, you can have your Oh, it's my dream to
work for Microsoft or it's my dream to work for AWS. And you
get there and you realize, huh, okay, it's just like any other
job. It's a great place to be. There's a lot of great perks,
but at the end of the day, you can get rid of you like that
Unknown: the layoffs to the start of 2024 signal a dramatic
shift in the tech industry, we're going to continue to see
layoffs happen as the future of work has changed as the future
of technology has changed. And as investors the appetite for
risk and growth versus profitability has dramatically
changed as well.
So why are big tech companies and other industries laying off
10s of 1000s of workers at a time when the US economy looks
strong on paper?
The start of the Covid 19 pandemic was a dire economic
event, at least at first. The tech industry though, boomed in
2020, Tech's top seven companies added $3.4 trillion dollars in
value. The feds emergency moves to bolster the pandemic hit
economy, like cutting interest rates to near zero helped boost
tech stocks. This move helped the tech industry to expand and
went on a hiring spree as people were confined to home. Amazon
added the most number of employees during this golden
period peaking at 1.6 million employees in 2021. If
you rewind before the layoffs, all the tech companies were
really putting an emphasis on growth. And so capital was
really cheap, you know, so you could get loans, you could get
money access to capital was really affordable. And then you
see as interest rates went up, and you start to see that that
growth in headcount didn't translate to growth and
profitability. And access to capital became quite a bit
tighter, you saw many companies start to hit the panic button.
And so we see saw these 1000s and 1000s of people get laid off
all at once. And that was quite a shocked 80%
of Twitter either left or quit or was pushed out laid off
whatever you want to call it. And yet the website still runs.
Do you think people are looking at Elon Musk and thinking, You
know what, we really need all these people.
I do get Elon Musk credit for this for kicking off and making
this acceptable Twitter, but a lot of the big companies decided
to get lean and efficient. And you know, this is where you kind
of start to see the incredible leverage of what these tech
platforms really have, which is they didn't need those people,
right? They were hoarding the talent. It was an option that
and it was a cheap one for them. Yeah,
I asked every tech CEO, do you take inspiration for what Elon
does? And they'll say on the record? No, we don't we would
never want to do that. But, you know, in the group chats,
they're all like, wow, that was an amazing move.
The artificial intelligence hype of 2023 is starting to have real
world effects in 2024 major tech CEOs are doubling down their
investments in AI. In January 2024, meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg
announced his plans to build an artificial general intelligence
known as AGI everyone.
Today I'm bringing Meta's AI research efforts closer together
to support our long term goals. Building general intelligence,
open sourcing it responsibly, and making it available and
useful to everyone
in all of our daily lives. All this investment in creating AI
jobs, but at the end spends of others, the recent report from
indeed shows that the number of job posts containing Gen AI
terms has been surging.
So there's about a 500% increase in the number of jobs that
mentioned generative AI, there's about a 6,000% increase in the
demand from job seekers for these jobs. But there still is,
I think, a mismatch the other way, and that the total amount
of demand for AI talent far outstrips the number of AI
professionals, every company
in every industry is trying to figure out how to use AI in
everything they do. I mean, AI is going to create a lot more
jobs as well. But at the same time, I would say that there
will be jobs that will be automated. So
you the AI has already hit the business effectively. Oh,
absolutely.
Absolutely. Especially in the tech sector. I mean, they've
been talking about it for years. Now, the fact that you have more
companies moving towards artificial intelligence, and
they're looking at the fact that as opposed to paying somebody
200 $300,000 a year to do the job, I can actually use
artificial intelligence to do the job that they used to be
able to do this
AI thing is real is not going away, and they can't have people
holding them back. And so what they've been doing over the past
year is finding places within the organization that they can
trim so that they can get to a place where they're shipping
faster, take managers out, and then engineers who are skilled
for a previous generation of technology, they're also leaving
to make room for people who are more skilled for artificial
intelligence,
AI is definitely playing a role in the layoffs that we're
seeing. Automation has increased efficiency for some of the
workers who are able to utilize AI to make marketing decisions
to analyze data to serve customers more efficiently and
effectively. So AI is a paradigm shift that is changing the way
people work and changing the priorities of tech companies.
Right now, I don't see that there's a big impact from AI in
these tech layoffs. Some businesses have maybe cited that
they're trying to, you know, shift priorities, and they're
letting some employees go to focus more energy on some of
these generative AI tools. But I think it's important to say
that, that's very different than saying that companies are, well,
we can let people go now because you know, general AI, and all
these tools are taking jobs.
The tech industry used to have this shiny image of having big
salaries, and unlimited perks. But the recent tech layoff
stories have completely shattered that image.
Devyn Rafols-Nunez: I really don't have any regrets about
posting it or what's happened. I think the bigger picture is that
I've been able to be a voice for people who have gone through
something similar. You know, the stories that I've received are
people who were laid off 2030 years ago, and they still
remember to this day, how that made them feel, and it did not
make them feel good. And I think that we should shed light on
stuff like that. So we can make a change, otherwise nothing will
change. In
Unknown: my experience, the public sharing of things like
one's layoff I think, is partially due to the fact of the
rise of social media such as tick tock, even YouTube shorts,
people are becoming much more comfortable with sharing their
experiences. And oftentimes when layoffs happen, people feel
shame when they are being laid off. In reality, though,
oftentimes if people are being laid off, it's a failure of
leadership of that company.
Tech companies that conducted widespread layoffs have seen a
bounce in their stocks. The tech heavy NASDAQ climbed to 43% in
2023. Its best year since 2020. Meta was the biggest gainer
among big tech surging over 194%. The tech stock boom also
helps boost the wealth of tech billionaires, the super rich
CEOs saw their wealth grow by 48%, or $658 billion in 2023.
Let's
hard particularly for a company like Google, which over the past
25 years hasn't gone through a moment like this. But you know,
we've always deeply cared about our employees. We also
note the sign of negative developments that are in some
sense a sign of positive developments of a greater demand
for the services and automation and activity improvements. Now
we see the stock market reacted quite favorably to this round of
layoffs. We see these record stock prices for a lot of these
tech companies. And so the stock price the investors really
favored profitability, really favored this lean year that
these tech companies had. And so instead of rewarding the growth
that we saw in them all pursue years ago, they're now rewarding
profit. And so the layoffs have continued. People have become
used to them, and regrettably, and sadly, it seems that the
layoffs is going to be the new normal.
data suggests an influx of layoffs in the tech industry,
starting from the second half of two At 22 and peaking and 2023
some non tech sectors are also seeing widespread layoffs. A
prime example is ups the courier giant raised eyebrows by
announcing 12,000 job cuts in January. The media industry
isn't immune to layoffs either. And 2023 to industry shed over
20,000 jobs in 2024. It looks no different as big names like
Paramount NBC Sports Illustrated The Los Angeles Times all have
announced major job cuts in early 2024. The banking sector
is also not shying away from cutting jobs, Citigroup, Morgan
Stanley Deutsche Bank, or some of the big names that have
already announced their layoff plans for 2024. It's worth
noting that even though these mass layoffs continue dominating
headlines, labor markets still seem strong. The US economy
added 353,000 jobs in January, much better than the Dow Jones
estimate for 185,000 jobs. But the unemployment rate held at
3.7%. Against the forecasts for 3.8%. Experts are divided on
whether the recent tech layoffs would trickle down to non tech
sectors.
Looking at the current job market right now, there's no
evidence that we're going to see any trickling obviously, you
know, kind of the jury's still out. It's still early to tell.
But it's interesting as we look back, and 2023 2023 was a year
of a lot of layoffs in the tech industry. And we didn't see any
of that trickle out. Even within the tech industry, which is
usually the government usually defines it as the information
sector. We didn't see a very high layoff rate. So we saw a
lot of companies announcing layoffs. But those companies
kind of carried an outsized share of the media, because then
once we rolled it all up, there was maybe about 1% of employment
that was being laid off. So really, ultimately, the overall
rate of people losing jobs to layoffs, remains near historic
lows. It
hasn't yet trickled down to the rest of the economy as we're
seeing the stock prices really high unemployment fairly low.
But at some point, if this continues, both companies and
individuals are going to have to cut back spending and that has
consequences that reaches far beyond the tech industry.