Meta has revealed plans to reduce its workforce by 5%, targeting its lowest-performing employees as the company gears up for what CEO Mark Zuckerberg described as an “intense year” in 2025.
Meta Platforms will trim about 5% of its "lowest performers" and plans to hire for the impacted roles this year, a company spokesperson said on Tuesday.
Meta is reducing its workforce by about 5% through performance-based terminations, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday. The company plans to hire new people to fill the roles, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in an internal memo to staff.
Meta is planning to slash roughly 5% of its staff this year, CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed on Tuesday.
Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said the cuts are necessary as the company builds ‘the most important technologies in the world.'
Meta is set to cut about 5% of its workforce, focusing on the company's lowest-performing workers, CNBC confirmed Tuesday. Another 5% of the 2024 employee base "who have been with the company long enough to receive a performance rating" will also be cut, Bloomberg reported, citing an internal memo.
Mark Zuckerberg has told employees he "decided to raise the bar on performance management" and act quickly to "move out low-performers," according to an internal memo seen by BI. The Meta chief wrote in a post on Workplace, the company's internal forum, that the company will be doing "more extensive performance-based cuts" during this year's peformance review cycle.
Brazil was on Tuesday analyzing a response from social media giant Meta which had been given a 72-hour deadline to explain its fact-checking policy for the country.
Zacks.com users have recently been watching Meta Platforms (META) quite a bit. Thus, it is worth knowing the facts that could determine the stock's prospects.
Stock buyers looking for hot investing trends to take advantage of are likely aware that artificial intelligence (AI) has been the top trending sector over the past couple of years. However, finding pure-play AI stocks that are worth buying has been tougher because doing AI well involves significant financial resources.
Meta Platforms (META -1.22%) received some discouraging news from the highest court in our land Monday, and investors reacted accordingly. They traded the bellwether social media stock down by more than 1% after digesting the legal headlines, on a day when the S&P 500 index closed in positive territory with a 0.2% bump higher.
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