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Google parent Alphabet cuts thousands of jobs, joining other tech giants in mass layoffs

Google employees, after watching peers at rival tech firms lose their jobs en masse, were anxious about when layoffs would happen to them. Then on Friday morning, some of them could not get into their corporate accounts.

The company, owned by Alphabet Inc, had finally decided to cut 12,000 employees, or 6 percent of the workforce. Employees described a mostly orderly if impersonal transition, communicated mostly via the same technology products they helped build, with no direct answers for individuals about why they were included or not.

Some found out they lost their jobs via messages sent to their personal email addresses. With no central way to see which roles had been eliminated, the remaining workers took to writing their peers on messaging app Google Chat to see if it worked. If not, it meant that person had lost their job, according to a Google employee who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

About six percent of the Google workforce was cut on Friday.

About six percent of the Google workforce was cut on Friday. Credit:AP

On messaging apps and internal chat rooms, employees started to pose theories and share anxieties about the future. The layoffs appeared to be structural, rather than performance-based. With performance reviews yet to be finalized later this month, some workers fretted that their roles were still at risk of elimination, according to multiple employees who spoke with Bloomberg, who asked not to be named speaking about internal matters.

Workers who had lost their jobs gathered on messaging platforms such as Discord and Slack to stay in touch.

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For months, the search giant had refrained from thinning its ranks as tech giants such as Amazon, Microsoft and Meta Platforms laid off thousands of workers. When the cuts did come, they appeared to impact a wide swath of the company.

“It’s hard for me to believe that after 20 years at #Google I unexpectedly found out about my last day via an email,” one software engineer, Jeremy Joslin, wrote on Twitter. “What a slap in the face. I wish I could have said goodbye to everyone face to face.”

The company’s prized artificial intelligence teams appeared to escape mostly unscathed. In a message to staff announcing the layoffs, Alphabet chief executive officer Sundar Pichai framed the cuts as a way for the company to sharpen its focus on artificial intelligence.