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The parent company of internet search giant Google, Alphabet, became the latest tech firm to announce mass job losses on Friday. Photo: dpa

Google parent company Alphabet to lay off 12,000 workers as AI focus intensifies

  • Cuts come at a delicate moment for the US company, which has long been the leader in key areas of AI research, but now faces competitive and regulatory threats
  • The news follows a raft of layoffs in the tech sector recently, which include 10,000 each by Microsoft and Amazon, and hundreds from China’s Weibo and Bilibili

Google’s parent company Alphabet is cutting about 12,000 jobs, or 6 per cent of its workforce, it said in a staff memo on Friday, as the technology sector reels from layoffs and companies stake their futures on artificial intelligence (AI).

Alphabet’s shares were up nearly 3 per cent in pre-market trading.

The cuts come at a delicate moment for the US company, which has long been the leader in key areas of AI research.

Alphabet now faces a challenge from Microsoft in a branch of tech that can, for instance, create virtually any content a user can think up and type in a text box.

Microsoft this week said recession worries were forcing it to shed 10,000 jobs, less than 5 per cent of its workforce, and it would focus on imbuing its products with more AI going forward – a point Alphabet’s CEO Sundar Pichai echoed in the memo.

Alphabet faced “a different economic reality” from the past two years when it rapidly expanded headcount, decisions for which Pichai said he took “full responsibility”. Pichai became Alphabet CEO in 2019.

Still, he said, Google was gearing up “to share some entirely new experiences for users, developers and businesses”, and the company has “a substantial opportunity in front of us with AI across our products”.

The company has been working on a major AI launch, two people familiar with the matter said. One of the sources said it would take place in the spring of this year.

Susannah Streeter, an analyst with Hargreaves Lansdown, said Alphabet’s advertising business, which underpins Google’s search engine and YouTube, was not immune to economic turbulence.

“Ad growth has come off the boil, a sharp contrast from the busy days of the post-pandemic reopening which saw a surge in consumer spending,” she said. The company faces competitive and regulatory threats as well, she said.

It was unclear if Alphabet would take a one-time financial charge related to the job cuts. Microsoft’s severance packages, lease consolidation and hardware-line-up changes will cost it more than US$1 billion, it said earlier this week.

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Inflation in the West forces Vietnam factory lay-offs

Inflation in the West forces Vietnam factory lay-offs

Alphabet’s layoffs followed a review of its people and priorities, leading to a workforce reduction hitting various geographies, Pichai said. Among those losing their jobs are recruiters, corporate staff and people working on engineering and product teams, he added.

In the United States, where Alphabet has already emailed affected employees, staff would receive severance and six months of healthcare as well as immigration support.

One person who said he worked on Google’s Chrome browser posted on Twitter that he had lost his job even as he stepped into a leadership position on a project.

Overseas, lay-off notifications will take longer due to local employment laws and practices, Pichai said in the memo.

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