Meta’s Performance Review Shakeup: Silent Layoffs in Disguise?
The Reality Behind Meta’s Mid-Year Performance Review Strategy
Meta, the tech giant behind Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, is once again in the headlines—this time for its internal performance review process. According to credible reports from The Information, Meta has expanded the number of employees who received the lowest performance ratings during its latest mid-year reviews. While not officially termed as layoffs, this move has raised eyebrows across Silicon Valley and beyond.
Let’s break this down and examine what’s really happening at Meta, why it matters, and what it signals for the broader tech landscape.
What Exactly Happened?
- In mid-2025, Meta conducted its internal mid-year performance reviews.
- A higher-than-usual number of employees received the lowest possible rating—“Meets Most” or “Needs Support” (depending on team).
- While no immediate layoffs were announced, historically at Meta, such ratings are often precursors to job cuts or employees being “managed out” in the coming months.
What Do Performance Ratings at Meta Actually Mean?
Meta uses a stack-ranking system, meaning employees are evaluated relative to their peers—not against absolute standards.
Here’s how the rating system generally works:
| Rating | Meaning | Typical Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Exceeds Expectations | Top performer | Bonuses, promotions |
| Meets All Expectations | Solid performer | Stability |
| Meets Most Expectations | Slightly underperforming | Watchlist, possible improvement plan |
| Needs Support | Poor performance | Likely separation within months |
According to insiders, the percentage of employees in the bottom two categories has increased in this cycle—even without clear performance dips in some cases.
Why Is Meta Doing This?
1. Cost Cutting Without Headlines
Meta, like many tech firms post-2023, is under pressure to streamline operations. Increasing the number of low-performing employees creates internal justification for:
- Voluntary resignations
- Performance Improvement Plans (PIPs)
- Quiet firing (pushing employees out without formal layoffs)
This is a stealth layoff strategy—one that avoids the negative PR associated with mass layoffs.
2. Efficiency Mandate from Mark Zuckerberg
Since declaring 2023 the “Year of Efficiency,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg has implemented:
- Multiple rounds of layoffs (around 21,000 jobs cut in 2023 alone)
- Project cancellations
- Managerial role reductions
- A renewed focus on high output and lean teams
The current review cycle aligns perfectly with this philosophy.
What the Data Suggests
According to internal memos and leaked reports:
- Managers were encouraged to be “more rigorous” in reviews.
- Around 15–20% of employees now fall in the lowest rating bands.
- This is up from 5–10% in prior review cycles.
Even more telling: Teams that recently went through restructuring or project changes are seeing disproportionately higher low ratings—indicating that context or external disruptions may not have been fairly considered.
What Does This Mean for Meta Employees?
Short-Term Implications:
- Increased anxiety among staff, especially those on remote or hybrid setups.
- Internal transfers become harder—most teams avoid hiring low-rated employees.
- Morale drops, as even high performers worry about the shifting goalposts.
Long-Term Implications:
- Potential for increased attrition, especially among those feeling unfairly targeted.
- Risk of losing top talent to competitors due to declining workplace trust.
- Fewer chances for internal growth as teams shrink and consolidate.
Is This a Meta-Only Trend?
Not at all.
Other tech giants like Google, Amazon, and Salesforce have also adopted similar tactics:
- Amazon was reported to push more employees into its “unrated” zone—a soft layoff technique.
- Google has implemented stricter performance benchmarks after its own layoff rounds.
- Salesforce used performance evaluations to trim headcount without formal announcements.
This reflects a broader industry-wide shift from hyper-growth to lean-and-efficient mode.
Conclusion: Corporate Strategy or Silent Cleanup?
Meta’s increased use of poor performance ratings isn’t just about employee performance—it’s a strategic HR move aimed at restructuring quietly.
For employees, it’s a warning sign.
For job seekers, it’s a cautionary tale.
For the industry, it’s the new normal.
The bottom line?
Layoffs no longer come with pink slips.
They now come disguised as performance reviews.
What Can Employees Do?
- Document performance thoroughly and maintain proof of achievements.
- Seek feedback regularly and clarify expectations.
- Have a backup plan—whether internal mobility or external opportunities.
- If placed on a PIP, treat it as a countdown, not a coaching opportunity.
Meta’s performance reviews are no longer just about performance—they are the new face of workforce optimization. Stay alert. Stay prepared.



