On-Prem

Personal Tech

Microsoft trims jobs as new year begins

Redmond claims tiny cuts are performance based


Updated Microsoft kicks off the new year with more job cuts, albeit fewer than one percent of employees reportedly face the ax.

As first reported by Business Insider, Microsoft is trimming its workforce again, including roles in its security division, with the cuts targeting underperforming employees. A Microsoft spinner confirmed the layoffs with BI but declined to specify how many staffers are affected, stating: "At Microsoft, we focus on high-performance talent."

"We are always working on helping people learn and grow. When people are not performing, we take the appropriate action," the spokesperson told The Register

The layoffs will reportedly affect less than one percent of the Windows maker's 228,000 employees, a total last updated in June.

The tech giant has made large-scale layoffs a pattern in the past several years, with more than 10,000 jobs cut in 2023, and additional layoffs in 2024 despite record earnings. As was the case in 2022, when it eliminated around a percent of its headcount, Microsoft noted that last year's job cuts and this latest round are all about pruning the payroll bush rather than making organizational changes.

A one percent cut, though it sucks for those losing their employment, is normally not worth mentioning, but we'll do so today so that if anyone hears word of the layoffs, they'll now know the full extent and context.

As we pondered last year after Microsoft's post-record-earnings layoffs in April 2024, there could be an AI link to the cuts, as Redmond has been aggressive in its push to adopt more and more AI. Unidentified sources who spoke to BI claimed Microsoft would likely backfill the jobs cut this month, meaning there wouldn't be much of a reduction in overall headcount. Microsoft confirmed this to be the case.

The Azure titan wrapped up a strong fiscal 2024 in June, posting consecutive quarters of rising earnings.

Microsoft reported $22 billion in net income for the fourth quarter of FY24 and saw that figure rise to $24.7 billion in the first quarter of FY25, which ended in October.

"AI-driven transformation is changing work, work artifacts, and workflow across every role, function, and business process," Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said in October. ®

Updated to add on January 15

Now Meta intends to lay off five percent of its workforce, about 3,600 of 72,000 folks, by targeting low performers. Top boss Mark Zuckerberg also said 2025 will be an "intense year."

And Microsoft is reportedly dumping some others workers in security, sales, experiences and devices, and gaming in a non-performance-based layoff.

Send us news
24 Comments

How Windows got to version 3 – an illustrated history

With added manga and snark. What's not to like?

Microsoft tests 45% M365 price hikes in Asia-Pacific to see how much you enjoy AI

Won’t say if other nations will be hit, but will ‘listen, learn, and improve’ as buyers react – so far with anger

Where does Microsoft's NPU obsession leave Nvidia's AI PC ambitions?

While Microsoft pushes AI PC experiences, Nvidia is busy wooing developers

Microsoft sues 'foreign-based' cyber-crooks, seizes sites used to abuse AI

Scumbags stole API keys, then started a hacking-as-a-service biz, it is claimed

Microsoft fixes under-attack privilege-escalation holes in Hyper-V

Plus: Excel hell, angst for Adobe fans, and life's too Snort for Cisco

Microsoft preps for a year of enterprise-impacting M365 retirements

Hey administrators – buckle up. 2025 is going to be a wild ride

Windows Patch Tuesday hits snag with Citrix software, workarounds published

Microsoft starts 2025 as it hopefully doesn't mean to go on

How the OS/2 flop went on to shape modern software

Even Microsoft's lead architect misunderstood the failure

First Foxconn, now Microsoft: Wisconsin town dissed by big tech

Redmond's pause to redesign planned datacenters won't scuttle this project, say Mount Pleasant officials

New Outlook marches onto Windows 10 for what little time it has left

Users of doomed operating system to receive unloved app via an update

Russia's Star Blizzard phishing crew caught targeting WhatsApp accounts

FSB cyberspies venture into a new app for espionage, Microsoft says

Tired of begging, Microsoft now trying to trick users into thinking Bing is Google

If you can't beat 'em, just imitate their branding, hide yours and hope they don't notice