When Jake Linsley got an email from Amazon, he expected a shipping delay. Instead, he read he was fired. Now, he and others face a tech job market shrinking fast as AI reshapes the industry.
The Scale of the Cuts
Since 2022, Amazon has laid off 57,000 people - about 16% of its corporate workforce.
The layoffs are part of a broader tech-sector downsizing. Amazon alone accounts for 13% of all tech-industry layoffs this year, according to data from Layoffs.fyi.
What Happened to the Laid-Off Workers
Many former Amazon employees describe shock and a brutal job hunt. Dorian Smith, a customer service and web development engineer who worked at Amazon for over 10 years, said, "It was almost heartbreaking in a way because my identity felt tied to that job." After being laid off, Smith accepted a position at a startup that was in its later growth phase. He sent out over 250 applications and received responses from just four companies, each a standard rejection note, he said. Courtney Haeflinger, a former Amazon Web Services employee, was eventually hired at AT&T, but noted the flood of applicants: "It makes it harder for us as real job seekers to get in the door." For each new job posting, typical applicants number 200 to 300, one former worker reported.
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After about six years at Amazon, he became a vice president at a startup focused on healthcare IT. He said, "I'd rather have a stable job than one that can grow 5x and disappear overnight." Chris DeSantis, a former senior product manager, is open to lower pay to work on cutting-edge AI. "When you look at these companies and what they're doing with AI, people like us, engineers and technical product managers, we want to be doing the fun stuff," he said.
AI's Role in the Industry Shift
The firm said in its report, "Tech remains the epicenter of this year's cuts. AI is the dominant force as companies are restructuring around it, automating roles and reallocating budgets toward new capabilities." Amazon officials said AI was not the primary driver of the layoffs, yet CEO Andy Jassy has cautioned staff that the technology will lead to a smaller corporate workforce.
Meanwhile, Amazon continues to hire in lower-cost countries like India and pushes remaining staff to adopt AI tools. Some workers report internal dashboards that track AI usage.
Yogesh Verma, a former AWS engineer laid off in January 2026, joined an AI marketing company. He said, "Initially, it felt like, 'Oh, what am I going to do now,' but it gradually turned out for the better." He also noted that before the layoff, "the workload was getting higher and higher, and the work-life balance was also getting worse."
These cuts are emblematic of a larger industry transformation. As tech companies restructure around AI, they are automating roles and reallocating budgets. Amazon's continued hiring in lower-cost countries and its push for AI adoption among remaining staff underscore this strategic shift. The result is a competitive job market where experienced workers must adapt to new demands.
Worth Noting
Amazon's spokesperson Montana MacLachlan said, "We don't make decisions to eliminate roles lightly, and we work hard to support employees who are impacted." But the layoffs have already reshaped the talent pool, pushing experienced workers into a market where AI startups are the main destination.
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