LinkedIn Slashes 5% of Workforce in Major Restructuring
Microsoft Corp.-owned professional networking giant LinkedIn is laying off approximately 5% of its global workforce, effective immediately, according to a source with direct knowledge of the matter.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, the insider confirmed to Reuters that the cuts—representing roughly 1,000 employees—are part of a broader reorganization aimed at sharpening focus on the company's fastest-growing revenue segments.
"LinkedIn is realigning its teams to invest more heavily in areas where the core business is expanding," the source said, declining to provide further details on which divisions will be most affected.
Reorganization and Strategic Shift
The layoffs come as LinkedIn restructures its product and engineering groups. The company plans to consolidate overlapping roles and shift resources toward subscription products, advertising, and talent solutions.

Internal communications obtained by SiliconANGLE indicate that employees in sales, marketing, and support functions are being notified this week. Affected staff will receive severance packages and outplacement services.
Background: LinkedIn Under Microsoft
LinkedIn, acquired by Microsoft in 2016 for $26.2 billion, has been a strong performer but faces slowing user growth in mature markets. The platform now boasts over 1 billion members worldwide.
This is not the first workforce reduction at LinkedIn; the company cut roughly 700 jobs in 2020 amid the pandemic. However, today's announcement marks the deepest single layoff since the acquisition.
Microsoft reported strong quarterly earnings but noted that LinkedIn's ad revenue growth has softened in recent months, mirroring broader digital advertising trends.
What This Means for the Tech Industry
Industry analysts view the restructuring as a defensive move in a tightening labor market. "LinkedIn is essentially pruning to protect margins," said tech analyst Maria Chen of Gartner. "Investors want to see disciplined spending even on solid assets."

The layoffs also signal that Microsoft is pushing LinkedIn toward operational efficiency rather than aggressive expansion. The parent company itself has cut 10,000 jobs in early 2023, and the LinkedIn reduction may be part of a broader belt-tightening across the Redmond-based conglomerate.
Implications for Professionals
For the millions of users who rely on LinkedIn for networking and job searches, the reorganization could mean fewer premium features or changes to the platform's algorithm. However, LinkedIn executives have stated they will continue to invest in AI-powered tools, including job matching and recruiter automation.
Market reaction has been muted; Microsoft shares were down less than 1% in after-hours trading following the news.
Next Steps and Timeline
Layoff notices will be delivered over the next two weeks, with most departures effective by the end of the calendar quarter. Affected employees in regions with strong labor laws, such as Europe, may receive longer notice periods.
LinkedIn plans to hold an all-hands meeting tomorrow to address the remaining staff and outline the new organizational structure. Further details on the product roadmap are expected to be shared at the company's annual Talent Connect conference in October.
This is a breaking story. Check back for updates.
Reporting sourced from Reuters and SiliconANGLE. Anonymity of the source has been preserved per standard journalistic practices.
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