DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

In a brutal job market, laid-off workers are trying to figure out their next steps in the new norm

February 1, 2026
in News
In a brutal job market, laid-off workers are trying to figure out their next steps in the new norm
Composite of Mike Kostersitz, Deborah Hendersen and Mody Khan
Mike Kostersitz, Deborah Hendersen, Mody Khan
  • This post originally appeared in the BI Today newsletter.
  • You can sign up for Business Insider’s daily newsletter here.

Life after a layoff

There’s no sugarcoating last week’s layoffs.

Amazon is cutting 16,000 corporate jobs, pushing thousands of workers into a job market already crowded with tech talent. Business Insider was all over the news, with scoop after scoop, including internal messages revealing which teams and jobs were affected.

The layoffs followed the 14,000 job cuts Amazon announced back in October.

And it’s not just Amazon.

UPS expects to eliminate 30,000 roles, on top of the 48,000 cuts it announced last year. Home Depot is laying off 800 corporate employees. Pinterest said it’s cutting 15% of its staff.

So, what happens next?

My colleague Jacob Zinkula, who covers the economy, has spoken with dozens of laid-off workers over the past year, many from Big Tech companies, including Amazon.

A clear theme has emerged. Many built careers years ago when opportunities felt endless. Now, even strong résumés and big-name employers don’t guarantee a quick bounce-back.

Part of the reason is simple math. US businesses are hiring at one of the slowest rates since 2013.

And the early impact of AI is starting to show up, too. Companies are finding ways to run leaner. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said AI can now let one employee do the work of entire teams — a shift that’s shaping how companies think about hiring.

Still, it’s not all doom and gloom.

Jacob recently spoke with Iren Azra Zou, a 27-year-old former Amazon employee in New Jersey, who was laid off in October. She explained how she landed a new job just two weeks later.

Her advice for other laid-off tech workers:

  • Take time to process and grieve, if you need it
  • Reflect on what you actually want in your next role
  • Reach out to your network. Ask for help

“Looking back, I see the layoff as a turning point because it helped me clarify what I wanted in my next role,” she said. “It was still difficult, but I felt more grounded and optimistic as time went on — and ultimately landed a role I feel great about.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post In a brutal job market, laid-off workers are trying to figure out their next steps in the new norm appeared first on Business Insider.

Newsom Reveals Moment He Knew Guilfoyle Marriage Was Doomed
News

Newsom Reveals Moment He Knew Guilfoyle Marriage Was Doomed

by The Daily Beast
February 26, 2026

Gavin Newsom still remembers the exact moment he knew his marriage to Kimberly Guilfoyle would not last. The 58-year-old California ...

Read more
News

DeSantis dealt major blow on paying for ‘Alligator Alcatraz’

February 26, 2026
News

Dylan Mulvaney ‘scared’ that ‘Beergate’ Bud Light backlash could’ve led to ‘actual violence’

February 26, 2026
News

Kalshi Accuses a ‘MrBeast’ Employee of Insider Trading

February 26, 2026
News

Far-right congressman sued for blocking activist who brutally mocked him

February 26, 2026
Trump’s new Surgeon General nominee panned by WSJ: ‘HHS needs serious people’

Trump’s new Surgeon General nominee panned by WSJ: ‘HHS needs serious people’

February 26, 2026
Patel Ousts F.B.I. Personnel Tied to Inquiry Into Trump’s Retained Classified Records

Patel Ousts F.B.I. Personnel Tied to Inquiry Into Trump’s Retained Classified Records

February 26, 2026
Trump’s Fantasy State of the Union

Trump’s State of the Union Was a Win for Democrats

February 26, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026