LinkedIn Cuts Jobs Despite Revenue Growth as Tech Layoffs Keep Spreading

LinkedIn Cuts Jobs Despite Revenue Growth as Tech Layoffs Keep Spreading

LinkedIn Cuts Jobs Despite Revenue Growth as Tech Layoffs Keep Spreading

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LinkedIn is cutting jobs and trimming spending across major teams despite revenue growth, as the Microsoft-owned company refocuses priorities.

Written By
Liz Ticong
Liz Ticong
May 14, 2026

LinkedIn is still growing. That did not spare employees from another round of cuts.

The Microsoft-owned professional networking company is reducing roles and trimming spending as leaders concentrate resources on the areas they believe will carry the business forward. Across the tech sector, companies are still chasing growth while asking fewer workers and smaller budgets to carry more of the load.

Inside LinkedIn, the reorganization now comes down to people, priorities, and the parts of the company that leadership is willing to shrink.

Layoffs affect several major teams

LinkedIn plans to cut about 5% of its workforce, with reductions spanning its Global Business Organization, marketing, engineering, and product teams, according to Reuters.

Employees in the US were expected to receive calendar invites shortly after CEO Daniel Shapero sent a companywide memo, while employees in Asia and the Pacific were expected to learn their status on Thursday.

LinkedIn said the layoffs are part of regular business planning. “As part of our regular business planning, we’ve implemented organizational changes to best position ourselves for future success,” a company spokesperson told Business Insider.

The company has about 17,500 full-time employees globally, so a 5% reduction would affect roughly 875 workers. The cuts are reportedly tied to a reorganization and a focus on growth areas, not to AI replacing workers.

Marketing, vendors, events, and office space face reductions

The pullback also reaches areas outside staffing. In the memo viewed by Business Insider, Shapero said the company would scale back marketing campaigns, vendor spending, customer events, and underused office space so teams can focus on work with the “broadest impact with the highest ROI.”

A smaller operating budget gives the reorganization a wider reach than the layoff count alone suggests. LinkedIn is also closing its office in Graz, Austria, another sign that the company is tightening its physical footprint and spending.

Shapero called the changes a matter of “hard prioritization and tradeoffs,” language that captures the memo’s broader direction. LinkedIn wants to keep investing, but with fewer resources spread across fewer bets.

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Revenue growth did not prevent layoffs

LinkedIn’s revenue rose 12% in the most recent quarter, Reuters reported, meaning the company is not cutting from a position of obvious weakness.

Its parent company has been tightening costs, too. Microsoft recently offered voluntary retirement buyouts to eligible long-serving US employees while continuing to spend heavily on AI infrastructure.

LinkedIn’s cuts underline a tougher reality inside big tech: growth can protect the business without protecting every team, office, or investment. For workers, the next phase of the AI-era tech boom may come with fewer seats at the table.

Coinbase plans to lay off about 700 employees as weaker trading conditions and AI priorities reshape the company.

Liz Ticong

Liz Ticong is a technology writer specializing in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, software reviews, and emerging business technologies. With more than a decade of professional writing experience and over five years contributing technology content for TechnologyAdvice, she helps readers understand complex technologies and evaluate the tools that best fit their needs. Liz has extensive experience researching, testing, and analyzing software platforms, AI tools, and technology solutions. Her work includes in-depth software reviews, buyer’s guides, product comparisons, and technology news coverage designed to help businesses make informed purchasing and implementation decisions. She regularly evaluates AI applications, automation tools, cybersecurity solutions, and business software, providing practical insights based on hands-on testing and research. In addition to her work with TechnologyAdvice, Liz has contributed technology content to leading industry publications, including eWeek and TechRepublic. Her background in technical writing and software analysis enables her to translate complex technical concepts into clear, actionable guidance for both business and technology audiences. Liz holds a bachelor's degree in Broadcast Communication from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines and continues to expand her expertise through ongoing education in artificial intelligence and emerging technologies. Through her writing, she helps readers navigate a rapidly evolving technology landscape with practical, research-driven insights and real-world product analysis.