In a dramatic turn of events, tech giant Meta laid off around 600 employees this week, sending shockwaves through the AI community. Most of the affected staff came from Meta’s AI infrastructure and FAIR (Fundamental Artificial Intelligence Research) units — the company’s nerve centers for next-generation machine learning, speech, and generative AI innovations.
But what began as a bleak day for hundreds of top-tier engineers quickly turned into a hiring frenzy across Silicon Valley. Within hours of the announcement, startup founders — eager to scoop up the industry’s best minds — began extending public offers to the newly unemployed Meta talent.
Credits: The Economic Times B2B
“Laid Off from Meta? We’re Hiring!”
Leading the charge was Sudarshan Kamath, founder of Smallest AI, a San Francisco–based startup that’s quietly making waves in the speech and conversational AI space. Kamath, an IIT alumnus turned U.S. entrepreneur, wasted no time in taking to social media with a bold message:
“Laid off from Meta? We are hiring in speech team for Smallest AI in San Francisco!”
But it wasn’t just the speed of his outreach that caught attention — it was the offer itself.
Big Paychecks, Bigger Ambitions
Kamath announced that Smallest AI was willing to offer base salaries ranging from $200,000 to $600,000, along with equity options. That top-end figure — over half a million dollars before stock — would make it one of the most lucrative offers currently in the AI startup ecosystem.
However, Kamath’s message made it clear that this wasn’t a role for the faint-hearted.
“Looking for experience with speech evals, speech generation, full duplex speech to speech,” he wrote, adding that candidates needed to be “f***ing smart and hungry.”
The blunt and unfiltered tone resonated with many in the tech world, signaling a new wave of no-nonsense, mission-driven AI founders who prize brilliance and speed over corporate polish.
Founders Line Up to Recruit Meta’s AI Veterans
Kamath isn’t alone in this gold rush for AI expertise. Several other founders and executives quickly followed suit, reaching out to the same pool of laid-off Meta employees.
Ben Taylor, founder of Spec, praised the work of Meta’s AI teams while opening his doors to them:
“The work you’ve done has shaped how all of us think about intelligence. With Spec, we’re building ambient intelligence that’s human-centered, contextual, and privacy-first. My DMs are open!”
Lucas Atkins of Arcee AI echoed that sentiment, inviting Meta’s Gen AI engineers to help “build the next frontier of Apache-2.0 models.” Meanwhile, Carina Hong from Axiom addressed her post directly to the affected employees, writing:
“You are world-class. We have read your work. You deserve a new place you call home.”
What could have been a day of despair for hundreds of AI professionals quickly turned into a showcase of their value — and the hunger of startups eager to build the next big thing in AI.
Meta’s Loss, the Startup World’s Gain
Meta’s layoffs are the latest in a series of tech-sector reorganizations as large corporations attempt to rebalance costs while focusing on near-term AI monetization. But for the startups vying for elite machine learning and speech tech talent, this reshuffle represents an extraordinary opportunity.
Small teams like Smallest AI, Spec, and Arcee AI are betting that with the right people — many of whom helped build the core of Meta’s AI stack — they can move faster, innovate bolder, and potentially outmaneuver the giants.

Credits: TimelineDaily
A Talent Market in Flux
For now, the message from Silicon Valley’s startup founders is loud and clear: there’s life — and opportunity — after a layoff. As Kamath and others open their doors to Meta’s best and brightest, one thing is certain — the AI talent wars are far from over. In fact, they may just be heating up.



