How Layoffs Affect Tech Employee Careers

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

Summary

Layoffs in the tech industry can suddenly disrupt careers, impacting not just income but also confidence and professional identity. This situation forces employees to reassess their goals, adapt their skills, and rethink strategies for growth in a rapidly changing field.

  • Build multiple skills: Develop at least one additional monetizable skill to help you transition into freelance, contract work, or new roles if needed.
  • Expand your network: Strengthen professional relationships because referrals and connections often lead to faster job opportunities than traditional applications.
  • Maintain a financial buffer: Keep at least six months of savings to cushion unexpected job loss, since hiring cycles can be unpredictable and lengthy.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Nick Palomba

    Enterprise Transformation Leader | AI, Cybersecurity & Cloud | Managing Director @ Microsoft | Advisor to CIOs, CISOs & Boards | Former Vice Mayor - Indian Rocks Beach, FL

    40,470 followers

    🚀 Bouncing Back After a Tech Layoff: 6 Steps to Reignite Your Career! 🚀 The tech industry is shifting fast—AI advancements, market shifts, and company restructuring have left many talented professionals displaced. But a layoff doesn’t define your future—it’s a chance to pivot, grow, and come back stronger. Here’s a focused 6-step action plan to get back on track and future-proof your career: ⸻ 📅 Step 1: Reflect, Reassess, and Reset ✅ Take Inventory: Assess where you are in your career. Do you want to continue in your current field or pivot to a growing sector like AI, cybersecurity, or cloud technologies? ✅ Identify Transferable Skills: Pinpoint core strengths like leadership, project management, and problem-solving that are valuable across industries. ✅ Set Clear Goals: Define the types of roles and industries you’re targeting to create a focused career trajectory. ⸻ 📅 Step 2: Upskill with High-Demand Skills ✅ Prioritize Growth Areas: • AI & Automation: Learn tools like Microsoft Copilot, prompt engineering, and AI ethics. • Cybersecurity: Consider certifications like CISSP, CISM, or CompTIA Security+. • Cloud & DevOps: Master Azure, AWS, and Kubernetes to stay ahead. ✅ Leverage Learning Platforms: • Microsoft Learn: Gain expertise in cloud, AI, and security. • LinkedIn Learning: Sharpen leadership and technical skills. • Coursera & edX: Explore specialized courses to stay competitive. ⸻ 📅 Step 3: Optimize Your Resume and LinkedIn Profile ✅ Highlight Measurable Impact: Use action verbs and quantify your achievements to showcase results. ✅ Refresh Your LinkedIn Profile: Optimize your headline, summary, and experience with relevant keywords aligned with your target roles. ✅ Activate #OpenToWork: Let recruiters and your network know you’re ready for the next opportunity. ⸻ 📅 Step 4: Rebuild and Expand Your Network ✅ Reconnect with Former Colleagues: Reach out to mentors, peers, and past connections for advice and introductions. ✅ Engage on LinkedIn: Comment on industry trends, share insights, and participate in relevant discussions. ✅ Attend Virtual and In-Person Events: Join industry webinars, meetups, and tech conferences to expand your network. ⸻ 📅 Step 5: Build a Portfolio or Start a Side Project ✅ Showcase Your Expertise: Contribute to open-source projects, build AI agents, or create a GitHub portfolio. ✅ Document Your Impact: Write case studies or blog posts showcasing your problem-solving approach. ✅ Explore Freelance or Consulting Opportunities: Platforms like Toptal, Upwork, and Catalant can help you stay engaged while exploring full-time roles. ⸻ 📅 Step 6: Launch and Leverage Your Thought Leadership ✅ Post Consistently on LinkedIn: Share insights on AI trends, leadership lessons, and industry reflections. ✅ Engage with Industry Leaders: Comment on relevant content and offer thoughtful perspectives. ✅ Stay Visible and Consistent: Thought leadership builds momentum—commit to sharing value regularly.

  • View profile for Vin Vashishta
    Vin Vashishta Vin Vashishta is an Influencer

    AI Strategist | Monetizing Data & AI For The Global 2K Since 2012 | 3X Founder | Best-Selling Author

    209,659 followers

    Layoffs hit older tech workers hardest. Technical ICs and low-level managers near the top of the salary band are prime targets for cost-cutting. Technical work products are commodities. Years of experience, awards, specialized knowledge, lead or manager titles, and loyalty do not provide protection. It’s not right, but this is the reality. April marks the 12th anniversary of my tech layoff and I learned the same lessons many are today. Here’s what helped me: Have a side business, clients, or products. My side projects turned into V-Squared, and a layoff became what’s now a 12-year-old data and AI consulting practice. Keep building skills for where opportunities are going. I was pivoting into data science (before I knew it was called that) and product management. Specialized, niche, and emerging cross-functional tech roles extend your IC career, but not indefinitely. Executive leadership, technical advisory, program management, product strategy, and technical strategy are pivots into safe haven roles for older tech workers. Consider launching a business. It’s not for everyone, but a business eliminates the ageism factors. Also, consider teaching and coaching. My courses and coaching services (B2B and B2C) have been more successful than I expected. Don’t underestimate how much structuring your experience into a curriculum is worth to others. More than anything else, don’t pretend this won’t happen to you. The number of people who age out of tech IC roles grows every year, and the age ceiling is getting lower. #Career #DataEngineering #DataScience

  • View profile for Nikki Barua
    Nikki Barua Nikki Barua is an Influencer

    Helping leaders and organizations achieve exponential performance in the AI age without losing what makes them human | Co-Founder @FlipWork | Reinvention Roadmap Newsletter | Keynote Speaker

    18,221 followers

    Over 29,570 tech workers have already been laid off in 2026 and we're not even through February. That number does not include job losses in finance, healthcare, retail, or media. Layoffs don't just take your job. They take your identity, your routine, and worse of all, your sense of worth. The first thing most of us say when we meet someone is what we do. When that's gone, who are you? Don't let a temporary setback (no matter how painful) get the best of you. Treat this gap like a launchpad, instead of a waiting room. 👉🏼 Give yourself 72 hours to grieve Don't toxic-positivity your way through this. Grieve your loss and feel the pain. It hurts because it mattered. Let it and then draw a line. 👉🏼 Reframe your story before anyone else does "I was laid off" is a fact. But the real narrative: "I'm a seasoned ops leader who scaled teams through a hypergrowth phase and is now selectively looking for the right fit". Write yours down. Say it out loud and own it. 👉🏼 Audit your skills for the AI economy The roles that existed 12 months ago are not the roles being hired for today. What you accomplished does not matter if it's no longer relevant. Ask yourself: What value can I bring that AI cannot? 👉🏼 Activate your network with specificity Don't text: "hey, let me know if you hear of anything." Instead: "I'm exploring Head of Ops roles at Series B companies in health tech. Who in your network should I be talking to?" Specific asks get specific results. 👉🏼 Commit to your reinvention The job market rewards people who show up with updated skills and a clear forward vision. Let go of the past and focus on future possibilities. Your reinvention IS your competitive edge. Every breakthrough career I've ever witnessed was preceded by a breakdown moment. This is the beginning of your most important chapter yet. Onward! - Nikki PS: If you've been impacted by layoffs, DM me. I'll get you a free seat in FlipWork's 30-Day AI Reinvention Program. People in this network showed up for me when I needed it most and I'm paying it forward. #CareerTransition #Layoffs #JobSearch

  • View profile for Manish Kumar

    Founder, Digital Agency & Academy | Linkedin & Analytics Expert | Speaker & Trainer

    30,254 followers

    I logged in at 11:00 for a routine day. By 11:04 I was laid off. This happened earlier this year when a US-based company laid off several Indian employees in a four-minute online meeting. No one expected it. They were hitting targets. Their team was performing well. The company had raised funding. Everything looked normal from the outside. This is exactly why these stories matter. They show how unpredictable jobs have become, even in companies that look stable. 1. A job is not a financial plan. Your salary can stop without notice. Your expenses will not. 2. You need a minimum six-month safety buffer. Most people keep two months of savings. That is not enough in today’s market, where hiring cycles are slow and interviews stretch for weeks. 3. You need at least one second skill that companies actually pay for. A monetisable skill. Something you can use to get freelance projects or contract work if you need it. 4. Your network matters more than your CV during a layoff. People who find roles quickly usually have strong connections. Referrals move faster than cold applications. 5. Learn how your industry is moving. If your company is cutting roles, others in the same industry may follow. Staying updated gives you time to prepare. Most people think layoffs happen only when you underperform. But in 2024 and 2025, layoffs have become structural. If the company needs to cut costs, entire teams go together. You do not control that. You only control how ready you are. A four-minute call should never be the difference between stability and panic. Preparation is not optional anymore. Views? #entrepreneurship #startups #marketing #technology #management #india

  • View profile for Liat Ben-Zur

    Board Member | AI & PLG Advisor | Former CVP Microsoft | Keynote Speaker | Author of “The Bias Advantage: Why AI Needs The Leaders It Wasn’t Trained To See” (Coming 2026) | ex Qualcomm, Philips

    11,583 followers

    I’m hearing from many old colleagues in big tech about how culture is evolving in these organizations. Layoffs are spiking, AI is reshaping workloads, and performance pressures are mounting. But the real story lies in a quieter, more troubling change: the erosion of bold leadership. Big tech once thrived on debate, disruption, and pushing boundaries. Now, I’m told of a growing tendency to “keep your head down.” Employees and leaders alike hesitate to challenge the status quo, question directives, or take risks. The vibe? Just tell me what to do, and I’ll do it. Don’t rock the boat. Stay off the chopping block. Fear of layoffs—where even top performers aren’t safe due to reduction quotas—fuels this shift. AI’s rise adds pressure, with management prizing “savviness” that most workers, swamped by daily grind, can’t find time to master. This survival mindset makes sense—nobody wants to be next in line for a pink slip. But it’s choking the life out of innovation. When people are too scared to make waves, you get incremental tweaks, not breakthroughs. “Good enough” becomes the norm, and the fearless spark that built these companies fades. Big tech’s caution comes with stability—deep pockets and vast data keep them in the game, even if they’re playing it safe. Hi Can Big Tech Bounce Back? So, what’s next? Employees face a tightrope: adopting AI tools to stay relevant while carving out space for bold thinking—without risking their jobs. Leaders must cultivate a culture where risk isn’t punished, even amid cuts. The winners will be companies that reward adaptability and courage over mere compliance. Layoffs and AI are driving winds of change through big tech. It’s a tough moment, but also a chance. Those who push past fear and dare to disrupt will define what’s next. How are you seeing this play out where you are?

  • View profile for Rakshit Goyal

    Ex-Hiring Manager | Forbes Council Member | O-1 Recipient | I help professionals land Finance, Supply Chain, People & Analytics roles at Amazon, Microsoft & more | 500+ professionals coached

    17,369 followers

    I received a message from a friend in the middle of the night. She’d just been laid off with no warning. Her voice was shaking because everything felt uncertain around her. “What do I do now?” she asked. It’s a question too many professionals have faced this year, and if you’re one of them, I want you to hear this clearly: you are not alone in this. You are not your job title, your layoff is not your fault, and this chapter does not define your whole story. But you still need a plan, support, and some resources to get started. Here are some of the best tools for laid-off professionals that you can use today to find your next opportunity: 1. Parachute: A free database for laid-off tech pros. Recruiters actively scout here, and you can also access free career coaching. 2. Silver Lining: A job board + peer community that offers résumé makeovers, LinkedIn help, and direct company connections. 3. Layoffs.fyi: A real-time tracker of tech layoffs and a tool to connect directly with recruiters via LinkedIn or email. 4. Peerlist Layoff Tracker: Updated in real time with layoffs by date, industry, and location. Great for tracking patterns and targeting outreach. On top of these, you should also follow these steps: Immediate steps: 1. Review your severance documents. Understand your final pay, benefits, and COBRA/healthcare options. 2. File for unemployment ASAP through your state portal to keep income flowing. 3. Back up important files. Save contacts, work samples, or documentation before losing access to systems. 4. Reach out to your manager/team. Let them know you’d love a reference or recommendation, you might need it soon. 5. Look for other job openings in your current company and apply if you meet the requirements. Lean into your network: 1. Update your LinkedIn. Add your availability and signal openness to recruiters. 2. Reconnect with past colleagues. Let them know you’re looking for most opportunities still come through warm referrals. 3. Join online communities or layoff-specific support groups. These offer both job leads and emotional support from people who get it. If you’ve recently been laid off, take a breath. Then take a step Use these tools & strategies Ask for help The next opportunity will knock on your door soon! P.S. DM me if you are a job seeker in the U.S. looking to land your dream role. I share my proven frameworks that’ll help you land more offers from the right companies.

  • View profile for Nishant Chahar

    EF (Fall’25) | Building in Stealth | Ex-Algoprep (Acquired) | Ex-Microsoft | 550k+ Subs on YT

    524,021 followers

    6,000 people at Microsoft lost their jobs this week. Engineers who built critical features. People who sacrificed weekends. Teams that delivered consistently for years. Let's be clear about four harsh truths: First, no company is loyal to you. They can't be. Business decisions will always outweigh personal relationships. Don't love your company; love your work and the skills you develop. Second, you are just a row in a database. Your access card, email, and benefits can be deactivated in seconds, regardless of your years of service or achievements. Third, a single income stream is increasingly risky in today's economy. This is why I started building side projects while still at Microsoft. Not waiting until I needed options, but creating them in advance. Fourth, layoffs are often random and arbitrary. You can be a top performer, exceed every metric, and still find yourself on the list. It rarely comes down to just individual performance; it's about cost centers, strategic pivots, or AI replacing entire functions overnight. To those affected: Your skills are valuable beyond any single employer. Your worth isn't determined by a company that just labeled you as an "expense" to cut. To everyone else: Start building alternative income streams today. Create content. Develop marketable skills. Build a network that transcends your current employer. The best security isn't a big tech logo on your badge. it's having options when you suddenly need them. #TechLayoffs #CareerAdvice

  • View profile for Shreya Mehta 🚀

    Recruiter | Professional Growth Coach | Ex-Amazon | Ex-Microsoft | Helping Job Seekers succeed with actionable Job Search Strategies, LinkedIn Strategies,Interview Preparation and more

    133,104 followers

    It doesn’t matter if you work at Google, Amazon, or Meta. It doesn’t matter if you’re a Director, an SDE, or an Analyst. The layoffs have proved that no job is safe. We’re 11 months into 2025, and I’ve lost count of the number of layoff emails I’ve seen. But most layoffs didn’t come out of nowhere. The signs were there, quiet, subtle, and ignored. The same thing happened to Nori - a senior analyst at a top tech firm as 80% of her team was laid off. But she survived the layoff, as she just pivoted into a different role before HR served the bad news. She noticed that while her team’s work was slowing, another team was expanding. She found an internal role that matched her skill set. She updated her resume, prepared for the shift, and applied. But most importantly, she spoke to her manager and asked: “Where do you see the business heading?” “Where can I add more value long-term?” “Would it make sense for me to explore this internal role?” Within a few weeks, she had transitioned to a new team. 3 weeks later, 80% of her original team was laid off. Layoffs aren’t random. They’re planned, budgeted, and approved weeks (if not months) in advance. But the warning signs are often right in front of you, if you’re paying attention. So ask yourself: → Is my team being deprioritized? → Are new roles opening in other departments? → Is leadership suddenly quieter? → Are decisions taking longer or skipping your team entirely? These are not just signals. They’re opportunities to act early. Don’t wait until it’s too late. Talk to your manager. Get curious about where the business is going. Keep your resume updated. Have a Plan B, even if you’re comfortable in Plan A. If you’re unsure how to position yourself or pivot inside your company, talk to a coach. The cost of waiting is higher than the cost of being ready. Repost this if someone you know needs to hear it. P.S. Follow Shreya Mehta 🚀 for real stories, resources, and frameworks to stay ahead of layoffs and land your next role in the U.S.

  • View profile for Joshua Talreja

    Built Airbnb India’s Engineering Team from Zero | 20+ Yrs Scaling TA at Google, Microsoft & Airbnb | I HELP Staff+ & Engineering Leadership Navigate their Career | TA Strategy & Org Building | Content Writer

    44,773 followers

    This week Atlassian cut 1,600 people. 10% of their workforce. Gone. Their CEO said they'd hire MORE engineers just 5 months ago. 900+ of those cuts were in R&D. 250 in India. And here's the part that should scare you: Atlassian stock went UP after the announcement. They're not alone. Block cut 4,000. Amazon cut 16,000. Ericsson 1,900. ASML 1,700. Over 55,000 tech workers have been laid off in 2026 so far. We're only in March. Every single one of these companies said the same thing: "We're investing in AI." But here's what they're NOT saying: They're also still hiring. Atlassian? Hiring AI and enterprise roles right now. Amazon? Hiring AI engineers and cloud architects. Block? Rebuilding entire teams around AI-first workflows. The jobs aren't disappearing. The JOB DESCRIPTION is changing. I posted about this all week because I see it every single day as a recruiter: → Brilliant engineers with 10+ years of experience who can't land interviews → While engineers with 4 years and strong AI + communication skills get multiple offers The gap isn't experience. It's relevance. And "relevance" in 2026 means: You can explain your work in business terms, not just technical terms You're building with AI tools, not just reading about them People outside your team know your name and your impact Your LinkedIn profile works for you even when you're asleep I've been recruiting for almost 20 years. I've never seen the market shift this fast. But I've also never seen this much opportunity for engineers who are willing to adapt. The ones getting hired right now aren't panicking. They're preparing. Don't wait for the layoff email to start. What's one thing you're doing this week to stay relevant? I want to hear it. Joshua Talreja #careers #jobs #hiring #techcareers #layoffs

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