Meta's recent layoffs take an unexpected turn
The tech giant just made a harsh move that is raising eyebrows.
Patricia Battle
Feb 11, 2025 7:03 PM EST
Last month, Meta (META) , which owns popular social media platforms Facebook and Instagram, sent a stern warning to employees that it was planning to cut roughly 3,600 jobs. That number amounts to about 5% of the companys workforce. In the internal memo sent to employees, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the job cuts would be based on performance, and the company will be hiring new employees this year to replace those who are laid off. Ive decided to raise the bar on performance management and move out low-performers faster, said Zuckerberg in the memo. We typically manage out people who arent meeting expectations over the course of a year, but now were going to do more extensive performance-based cuts during this cycle. Zuckerberg said the layoffs come during a time when Meta is heavily focusing on developing artificial intelligence, its smart glasses and the future of social media.
This is going to be an intense year, and I want to make sure we have the best people on our teams, said Zuckerberg. The first round of Metas job cuts kicked off on Feb. 10, and some employees who were let go are claiming that they were blindsided by being laid off since they had recently received positive performance reviews, according to a new report from Business Insider. The fired Meta employees who spoke to Insider said that they received "At or Above Expectations" ratings in their 2024 mid-year reviews. These ratings are allegedly the middle tier in Metas three-level performance system. The former employees claim that when they received notification that their jobs were being cut, they were shocked to find out that their ratings had fallen to "Meets Most," which is a low tier in Metas performance rating system that means an employee met most, but not all, expectations. "When I received the email I was surprised by it mostly because I have a very solid performance history and no indicators of the last six months of performance problems," said one former employee in an interview with Insider.
Another former Meta employee told Insider that they were laid off yesterday even after their manager assured them that they would be safe from the job cuts. "We were told by leadership that if we would be impacted by this, then we would already be expecting it, based on conversations our managers should have been having with us in our weekly one-on-ones," said the former Meta employee. "But I was completely blindsided by this. My manager had been telling me that I have been doing great and did not provide any areas to be worked on. My manager even said that I would be fine and not impacted."
The move from Meta comes after an internal memo last month gave its managers the green light to lay off higher-performing employees if they werent able to meet reduction targets solely by cutting low-performing employees, according to Insider. In a statement to TheStreet, a Meta spokesperson said that performance ratings employees received were not downgraded. They also claimed that just because an employee previously met expectations, it doesnt mean that they have continued to meet the bar.
https://www.thestreet.com/employment/metas-recent-layoffs-take-an-unexpected-turn
Maybe the termed employees didn't vote for Trump.

Dave Bowman
(5,010 posts)Wicked Blue
(7,883 posts)New corporatespeak term for firing people
purrmaid
(38 posts)...enslaved people workers?