Meta, the owner of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, is preparing to cut about 5% of its global workforce, as the company looks to drop “low performers faster”.
In a memo to staff, boss Mark Zuckerberg said he had made the decision to speed up the firm’s regular performance-based cuts in anticipation of an “intense year”.
He said the company would “backfill” the roles later in 2025.
The company, which employs about 72,000 people globally, did not say how the cuts would be distributed around the world.
Workers in the US who are affected will know by 10 February, according to Mr Zuckerberg’s memo. Those outside the US will be informed “later”.
“This is going to be an intense year, and I want to make sure we have the best people on our teams,” he wrote.
“I’ve decided to raise the bar on performance management and move out low performers faster.”
The move comes on the heels of other big decisions by Mr Zuckerberg, including moves to end the company’s fact-checking and diversity programmes.
Performance-based job cuts are common in corporate America. At Meta, they would normally unfold over the course of a year, Mr Zuckerberg said, but the process is being accelerated this year.
Roughly 3,600 people could be affected this move. They will receive “generous severance”, he said.
The last big cuts at Meta came in 2023, when the company cut about 10,000 positions in a cost-cutting drive after Mr Zuckerberg declared it the “year of efficiency”. It cut about 11,000 roles in 2022.
Mr Zuckerberg also appears to be overhauling his own public image.
On a recent podcast with Joe Rogan, Mr Zuckerberg said he thought companies needed more “masculine energy” and discussed taking up martial arts, which he said he enjoyed because he felt he could more fully express himself, than in his corporate role.
“When you’re running a company, people typically don’t wanna see you being like this ruthless person who’s just like I’m gonna crush the people I’m competing with,” he said. “But when you’re fighting, it’s like no.”
“I think in some ways when people see me competing in the sport they’re like oh no, ‘That’s the real Mark.”