The growth of Artificial Intelligence has moved from pilot projects to live deployments that are reshaping headcounts. The article notes that half of chief executives believe they may replace jobs with Artificial Intelligence, and that companies using the technology extensively report higher productivity and lower costs. Many firms present Artificial Intelligence as augmentation, but public memos, layoffs and executive comments show the technology is already driving job reductions in multiple sectors.
Several large companies are named as having already replaced workers with Artificial Intelligence or made moves that strongly suggest it. Amazon publicly said in a memo from CEO Andy Jassy that it plans to use Artificial Intelligence to reduce its corporate workforce and to automate tasks across advertising, Amazon Web Services and internal operations. Recruit Holdings, owner of Indeed and Glassdoor, cut about 1,300 employees and said it aims to simplify hiring by using Artificial Intelligence and data. MSN replaced dozens of journalists in 2020 and has used AI software to generate content. Dukaan replaced 90 percent of customer support staff in 2023 with an in-house chatbot, cutting customer support costs by 85 percent and lowering wait times. Ikea plans to phase out call center work and use a bot called Billie while upskilling affected employees into interior design roles. BlueFocus ended contracts with human content writers and designers in favor of generative Artificial Intelligence after securing an Azure OpenAI license and partnering with Baidu. Salesforce and Microsoft both ran major rounds of job cuts amid increased Artificial Intelligence investment, with Salesforce later reporting a reduction in customer support headcount from 9,000 to 5,000 thanks to agentic AI agents. Other named companies include Duolingo, Turnitin, Klarna, Best Buy and Google, each linked in the article to workforce changes associated with Artificial Intelligence adoption.
The article also lists organizations planning further replacements. Elon Musk´s Department of Government Efficiency is offering buyouts and is reported to be using Artificial Intelligence tools to identify cuts and to develop chatbots. IBM plans to replace about 30 percent of back-office roles, roughly 7,800 positions, over five years and has paused hiring for some clerical roles. BT expects to cut around 55,000 jobs by the end of the decade and to replace about 10,000 roles with Artificial Intelligence. Various Wall Street banks are exploring automating entry-level tasks, and King confirmed that some laid-off staff will be replaced by tools that build game levels. The piece concludes that while companies often couch these changes as efficiency or augmentation moves, the cumulative actions underscore widespread job insecurity tied to Artificial Intelligence deployment.