Meta’s CTO admitted in an internal memo this week that the company did an “atrocious job” rolling out its AI reorg, per a new Wired report—leading morale to tank. And the planned fixes essentially amount to more social events and better snacks. Meta is the year’s starkest example of a firm trying to transform into a leaner, AI-first workforce, and it’s showing us the biggest hurdle: keeping its remaining employees from revolting. While conceding that it botched its explanation of the AI shift, the company has largely stood by the shakeup itself. To recap: In April, the firm announced it would lay off 8,000 people, and then soon after said it would reassign 7,000 more. That reshuffle fed a new division called Applied AI, where staff weren’t recruited so much as conscripted. And the work itself—generating coding puzzles and training data to sharpen Meta’s models—is reportedly so mind-numbing that one worker called Applied AI “literally the gulag.” The morale-boosting fixes the company has proposed so far: capping managers at about 20 direct reports (down from 50), better “microkitchens” in the office, beefed-up event and travel budgets, and letting Applied AI engineers apply for other Meta roles. (The employee keystroke-and-click tracking, though, is mostly still on.)—WK For more on the state of morale at Meta, keep reading on Tech Brew.—WK |