Zuckerberg says Meta made 'mistakes' in AI workforce shift


Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives outside court in Los Angeles, California, U.S., February 18, 2026. REUTERS/Mike Blake

June 12 (Reuters) - Meta CEO ⁠Mark Zuckerberg has told employees that the social media giant has made mistakes ⁠in its AI transformation of its workforce, according to an internal memo seen ‌by Reuters.

Zuckerberg is pumping hundreds of billions of dollars into AI as he seeks to reshape his company's inner workings around the technology, reflecting a broader pattern among major U.S. companies this year, particularly in the tech ​sector.

In the memo, Zuckerberg describes the rapid advances in ⁠AI and the challenges brought on ⁠by the boom in the technology.

"Given the complexity of these changes, we've made mistakes and ⁠will ‌almost certainly make more," Zuckerberg said, adding that he is also "focused on providing as much stability as possible" in terms of organization changes going forward.

"I don't want to ⁠overpromise because the world is changing in ways that are ​out of our control," ‌he said, reiterating that Meta does not expect more company-wide layoffs this year.

He said ⁠Meta will try ​to find new roles for employees reassigned to train AI models, after the Facebook owner carried out a massive restructuring in May, laying off 10% of its workforce globally and transferring 7,000 employees ⁠to new initiatives related to AI workflows.

"By creating important ​new roles for people, this also allowed us to shrink the size of teams knowing that if we make mistakes in some places, then we could transfer some people back," Zuckerberg said.

Meta ⁠declined to comment on the memo when contacted by Reuters.

The company plans to increase investment in team-building initiatives, Zuckerberg said, including higher budgets for offsites and corporate events, and is organizing a large-scale hackathon in July to foster cross-team collaboration and development on its latest models.

Zuckerberg ​said Meta has taken note of concerns over the widening ⁠of manager oversight responsibilities and plans to scale back the practice.

Meta's new Applied AI Engineering unit ​reportedly had a flat structure with up to 50:1 ‌ratio of individual contributors to managers.

In April, Meta ​raised its annual capital spending forecast to between $125 billion and $145 billion.

(Reporting by Katie Paul in New York and Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Arun Koyyur)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

The rise of digital love: Does AI make better partners than humans?
OpenAI under investigation by coalition of state attorneys general, WSJ reports
US blocks foreign access to Anthropic's most advanced AI models, Axios reports
Roku is exploring strategic options, including a sale of the company, sources say
Microsoft has considered spinning off Xbox, the Information reports
Google to challenge German ruling saying it is liable for AI-generated false claims
Man jailed in UK for encouraging US suicide via Discord chat platform
Sam Bankman-Fried loses bid to overturn crypto fraud conviction
Meta's social networks recover after brief outage
Exclusive-South Korea's SK Hynix to opt for Nasdaq for planned US listing, sources say

Others Also Read