Hewlett Packard became the latest of the Bay Area technology firms cutting deep into workforces. HP announced Thursday to eliminate between 1,000 and 2,000 workers as part of a broader restructuring effort. It marks HP’s strategic shift into emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence while facing economic uncertainties.
The new reductions are part of HP’s ongoing restructuring plan that began in 2022 and originally targeted eliminating up to 6,000 jobs over three years.Â
HP Targets $300M in Cost Savings by 2025 Through Workforce Reductions
In its most recent SEC filing, the updated plan is to yield about $300 million in cost savings by fiscal 2025 as part of total cost savings of $1.9 billion over fiscal 2023 and 2025.
These cuts will affect a portion of HP’s global employees, who total around 58,000 from 59 nations. Although the company will still maintain a presence in Palo Alto, California, the implementation of these cuts will vary depending on local legislation and will involve negotiation with representatives of workers in an attempt to adhere to different labor laws globally. Though it makes workforce reductions, HP continues to hire in growth areas, namely the AI-based products strategically.Â
This strategy of both reduction and hiring benefits the company to maximize operations as well as invest in innovation-led projects at the same time. Some of the workforce reduction can be achieved through early retirement programs, with alternative arrangements available for near-retirees.
HP’s action is just one of a wave in the high-tech industry, as companies rethink their priorities and resource allocation. Another Bay Area technology company this week, Autodesk, announced it would be reducing its workforce by around 9%—around 1,350.
Macroeconomics, AI, and Layoffs: Tech’s Evolving Landscape
Similar to HP, Autodesk cited geopolitics and macroeconomics but emphasized more in artificial intelligence investment. These recent cuts come on the heels of other tech giants that made similar reductions earlier this year. Meta cut 3,600 jobs in February, and Salesforce made significant workforce cuts too. The trend indicates an industry reaction to slowing economies and a larger trend toward more sustainable business models centered around new technologies.
CEO Enrique Lores has been optimistic regarding HP’s long-term future despite the restructuring underway. The company’s focus on digital transformation and AI incorporation is in alignment with the overall trend of the wider industry, so HP is well-placed to benefit from growth in these spaces in the future.
For the technology sector overall, this period of consolidation is a dramatic contrast to the runaway expansion of the past. The Bay Area, the historic center of tech expansion, is experiencing a rebalancing as companies rationalize operations while investing in core technologies like AI.
The short-term effect of such redundancies will be most severely affected by staff, and hence transition resources and support are paramount. However ongoing investment in new technology within the industry points towards potential future job opportunities in specialist areas.
As HP and its rivals navigate this era of transformation, how successfully they can walk the tightrope between cost-cutting and strategic spending will determine their competitive position in the evolving tech landscape. While restructuring today might be problematic in the near term, it also reflects the industry’s adaptation to changing market conditions and emerging technologies.
The capacity of the technology sector to recover and re-invent itself has been a hallmark of its development. This most recent round of reorganization may end up making companies like HP more robust as they reduce expenses and re-align incentives toward the most promising areas of future growth.