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Meta employees face a slow-swinging axe and a tough choice: hustle or job hunt

Mark Zuckerberg sitting in suit
Meta announced it will be laying off about 10% of its staff next month. Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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When layoffs are looming, do you grind harder or dust off your résumé?

Meta employees are now facing that thorny question after the tech giant said on Thursday it plans to eliminate about 10% of its workforce on May 20, acknowledging that the announcement "puts everyone in an uneasy state" and leaves them "with nearly a month of ambiguity."

The long notice period has created a peculiar kind of workplace limbo: Unlike the abrupt cuts that have become common in tech, Meta's warning gives employees time, but not clarity.

"It freaks everybody out," former Netflix chief talent officer Patty McCord told Business Insider.

Meta employees, including its top performers, likely feel unsettled because layoffs aren't necessarily about individuals' performance.

Many are probably thinking to themselves, "this could be me," she said. (One worker described the uncertainty as "28 days of hell.")

Meta said it outlined its layoff plans in an internal memo because the news had leaked. At that point, the company had little choice but to confirm it, said Libby Sartain, a former head of HR at Yahoo and Southwest Airlines.

"As we say here in Texas, the barn door is already open, and the horses are running," she said.

Hustle or hunt?

When workers fear or anticipate layoffs, they often try to prove their value. Doing so often doesn't make a difference, said Chikara Kennedy, a former senior HR manager at Meta and the CEO of a coaching and consulting firm.

"People come up with the most arbitrary projects and ideas," said Kennedy, who was impacted by Meta's 2023 layoffs round. Their goal is to "prove their worth because they're really trying to control the uncontrollable."

That impulse is largely driven by fear, Kennedy said, as workers look for "some level of relief for the anxiety" and end up overextending in an effort to stand out.

Yet in Meta's case, the individuals being let go have likely been identified due to the sweeping nature of the cuts, said Laszlo Bock, a former Google head of human resources who now advises startups.

"Working harder in the final weeks won't move the needle," he said. Instead, Bock said employees are often better off using the time to network and line up their next move.

"If you survive the cut, then you lose a few hours," he said. "If you don't, starting outreach before you're impacted gives you a leg up."

Grinding it out can still pay off — even if it won't necessarily save you

Workers shouldn't expect their boss to be much help, Bock said, as managers may also be at risk of getting a pink slip.

"Most will be putting on their own oxygen masks before assisting others," he said.

While Meta is likely to be focused on preventing sabotage and retaining top performers during the limbo period, continuing to show up and do the job can still matter, said Ashley Herd, a cohost of the "HR Besties" podcast and a former head of human resources in North America at consulting firm McKinsey.

It could help you get recommendations from higher-ups for your next stint.

"Others may notice your effort and advocate for you," said Herd.

Disengaging is also a bad idea as it might give the company a reason to add to its layoff roster, said Sartain, the former Yahoo and Southwest Airlines HR exec.

"You for sure will be on the list if that occurs," she said.

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Sarah E. Needleman
Sarah E. Needleman covers leadership and the workplace for Business Insider.Previously, she was a reporter for The Wall Street Journal for more than two decades, covering technology companies, entrepreneurship and executive recruiting. In 2022, Sarah received an honorable mention with WSJ colleagues for their coverage of workplace misconduct at Activision Blizzard from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing.Sarah graduated from Rutgers University in 1997 with a bachelor's degree in journalism. She lives with her husband, daughter, and a fur child (an Australian labradoodle) in northern New Jersey.
Tim Paradis
Tim Paradis
Tim reports on the workplace and how forces like automation, artificial intelligence, and remote work will reshape how many of us make a living. Previously, Tim was Business Insider's future-of-business editor where he oversaw coverage of sustainability; diversity, equity, and inclusion issues; the future of work; careers; and C-suite developments. He previously worked in various corporate research roles, in higher ed, and wrote about Wall Street and the stock market for the Associated Press.Contact Tim via email or the encrypted messaging app Signal at tparadis.70.Links to some of his most popular stories: 
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Ana Altchek
Ana is a reporter on the careers and leadership desk, where she writes about workplace trends and how AI is reshaping the roles of software engineers. She also regularly interviews CEOs and C-suite executives about their career trajectories and leadership insights.Ana hosts a weekly video series called "Work Shift," which breaks down the biggest workplace news of the week. She holds a master’s degree in multimedia journalism from NYU and has been featured on BBC, NPR, and other global media platforms.Have a tip? You can contact her via email at aaltchek@insider.com or through the secure-messaging app Signal at aalt.19.Story highlights:The work entry-level engineers used to do is changing. This is their new playbook.No, your coworkers don't want to grab a drink — they want to hit the cold plungeFree lunch gets fancy: As perks disappear from the workplace, one is growing — and even getting betterSmash Therapy: In an era of layoffs and AI anxiety, smashing things has become corporate America's newest coping mechanism.The billionaire CEO who made history with SpaceX describes facing the 'vacuum of death' in only a spacesuitBobbi Brown shares how she found her second act: 'I just worked on myself — from the inside out.'Gap's brand CEO has 3 rules for cutting down on meetings — and asking if he's on the invite list breaks one of them