Pinterest shares got slammed Tuesday, dropping more than 10%, after the company said itβs laying off nearly 15% of its workforce and cutting back on real estate.
Thatβs hundreds of jobs gone. Itβs all happening as Pinterest rushes to plug artificial intelligence into everything it does.
The company said in a securities filing that the layoffs will be wrapped up by late September, just as the third quarter closes. At last count, Pinterest had over 4,500 employees globally.
These cuts mean roughly 600 to 675 workers will be gone before fall. Theyβre also expecting to take a $35 to $45 million hit in pre-tax restructuring charges. Most of it will come from severance costs and scaling back office leases.
Pinterest puts AI at the center, restructures marketing and sales
This isnβt just a round of layoffs. Pinterest made it clear itβs shifting its entire structure to revolve around AI. It said itβs βreallocating resourcesβ to AI-heavy teams and cutting from areas that donβt align with that goal. That includes reworking how the company handles sales and marketing. AI is now the main character.
Pinterest said itβs focused on building out AI-powered features. Back in October, it launched a tool called the βPinterest Assistant,β meant to help users shop on the platform with smarter search. And for advertisers, the platform has started pushing automated ad tech, designed to make it easier for marketers to get results with less manual setup.
CEO Bill Ready claimed in November that, βOur investments in AI and product innovation are paying off.β He called Pinterest a leader in visual search and said itβs now an AI-powered shopping assistant for 600 million people. Thatβs a big number. But Wall Street didnβt bite. The stock still tanked, and investors clearly didnβt love the restructuring news.
Itβs not just Pinterest doing this. Over the past year, about 55,000 U.S. workers lost their jobs due to AI-related shifts, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas. Companies across industries are cutting people and replacing them with AI tools that can do tasks faster and cheaper. Whether thatβs really true or just a slick excuse is still up for debate.
Amazon plans another 15,000 job cuts, ties it loosely to AI
The wave of AI-related layoffs isnβt stopping at Pinterest. Amazon is planning a second round of corporate cuts next week, aiming for a total of 30,000 office jobs cut. Two sources familiar with the companyβs internal discussions said the next wave could hit as early as Tuesday.
Amazon already axed 14,000 white-collar jobs back in October, and at the time, tied the cuts to the rise of AI software. They told staff that βthis generation of AI is the most transformative technology weβve seen since the Internet.β That line showed up in internal memos, clearly trying to frame the layoffs as innovation-driven.
But then CEO Andy Jassy walked that back during a third-quarter call. He said the job cuts werenβt really about money or AI. βItβs culture,β he said. He blamed layers of bureaucracy and said Amazon just had too many people doing the same thing. In his words: βYou end up with a lot more people than what you had before, and you end up with a lot more layers.β
Back in early 2025, Jassy already warned that Amazonβs corporate headcount would shrink as AI tools got better. Thatβs now playing out. More companies are using AI bots to automate tasks, cut headcount, and trim costs. During its December AWS event, Amazon rolled out new AI models to show off just how fast things are changing.
Still, the full 30,000 job cuts make up less than 2% of Amazonβs 1.58 million employees. Most of Amazonβs workforce is still in warehouses and fulfillment centers, so the layoffs mainly hit corporate roles.
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