Google employees are organizing around a new concern: keeping their jobs

3 hours ago 4

Crowd at an outdoor Alphabet Workers Union rally holds “Googlers for Job Security” signs behind a speaker.

Nearly 100 Google employees held a protest about job security on Thursday. Pranav Dixit/Business Insider

Dozens of Google employees from around the country gathered in the shadow of the company's Mountain View headquarters on Thursday, holding signs reading "Googlers for Job Security" and demanding stronger protections against layoffs.

At noon, nearly 100 workers filled a grassy stretch of the campus, flanked by the Googleplex on one side and the sweeping canopy of Google's visitor center on the other. Many wore matching black shirts. Others held Alphabet Workers Union placards or helped unfurl a long white banner covered with the names of more than 4,500 employees who signed a petition about job security addressed to CEO Sundar Pichai and three senior executives.

"We want voluntary exits before layoffs, we want guaranteed severance standards, we want an end to performance quotas," Parul Koul, a Google software engineer and president of the Alphabet Workers Union, which has around 1,400 members, told the crowd. Alphabet, Google's parent company, employs nearly 191,000 people.

The protest captured a shift that has unsettled workers across the tech industry. Since 2022, companies including Google, Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft have cut tens of thousands of jobs, often through repeated rounds that left employees waiting for the next notice. Google laid off 12,000 employees in 2023 and has since conducted several smaller rounds, collectively affecting thousands of employees.

Crowd outdoors holds signs and wears shirts reading "GOOGLERS FOR JOB SECURITY." at a union demonstration.

Google employees protested over job security at the company headquarters on Thursday.  Pranav Dixit/Business Insider

The company's workforce, known for pushing management on ethics and corporate policy, is now organizing around something more fundamental: whether employees can count on basic security in an era of rolling layoffs, tougher performance systems, and anxiety over how AI will reshape their jobs.

The petition, which the union first wrote in early 2025, asks Google to guarantee severance for every laid-off worker, offer voluntary exit packages before mandatory cuts, end forced-distribution performance ratings, and let employees receive severance as extended paid leave. The union also wants Google to make voluntary exits a formal policy instead of offering them selectively.

Koul told Business Insider that employees tried to deliver it to Pichai last year and, after receiving no substantive response, continued collecting signatures and returned Thursday with more than twice as many names.

Business Insider attended the event and spoke with Googlers about what they want from the company and why they're protesting.

Google did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Googlers delivered a petition to top execs

About 20 workers began delivering the petition around 9 a.m. on Thursday, Kaylee Lubick, a Google software engineer and union member, told Business Insider.

The group first visited the offices of Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian and senior vice presidents Rick Osterloh and Nick Fox, then went to Pichai's office. Lubick said the executives were not there to meet with them, and the employees slipped the petition under their doors.

The union says Google offered voluntary exit packages to more than 70,000 workers across several rounds since the campaign began. Koul told Business Insider that the figure reflects the number of employees eligible for the offers, not the number who accepted them.

At the protest, speakers described a workplace reshaped by several rounds of layoffs.

"I see worried people, grateful to still have a job, do the best they can to keep it," said Nobel Barakat, a Google software engineer. "I've seen people work longer and longer days with the hopes that they avoid a sudden poor performance rating."

Matthew Hoffman, a Google DeepMind engineer, said he joined the protest to show his support, even though he had not been personally affected by layoffs and had not yet joined the union.

Matthew Hoffman, a Google DeepMind engineer, said he joined the protest to show his support, even though he had not been personally affected by layoffs and had not yet joined the union

Matthew Hoffman, a Google DeepMind engineer, said he joined the protest to show his support, even though he had not been personally affected by layoffs and had not yet joined the union.  Pranav Dixit/Business Insider

"I think I realized that just because something hasn't affected you personally doesn't mean it won't someday," he said.

As television cameras rolled, workers raised their signs and chanted: "Google, Google, can't you see? We deserve security."

Google has a history of employee activism

Thursday's protest drew on Google's long history of employee activism.

In 2018, more than 4,000 workers opposed Project Maven, a Pentagon contract that used Google's AI to analyze drone footage. Later that year, roughly 20,000 employees walked out over Google's handling of sexual-misconduct allegations against senior executives. In 2024, Google fired workers after sit-ins protesting Project Nimbus, its cloud-computing contract with the Israeli government.

On Wednesday, Business Insider reported that a Google DeepMind researcher resigned after the company signed an agreement allowing the Pentagon to use its AI for classified operations. Around 600 employees had urged Google not to enter such a deal.

"We have the power to change things for ourselves," Koul said. "The only thing preventing us is how organized we are."

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Pranav Dixit is the Meta Correspondent at Business Insider based in the San Francisco Bay Area. He writes about Meta’s products, policies, and internal workings while examining how the company’s decisions shape how billions of people connect and communicate.Previously, Pranav was the India-based technology correspondent for BuzzFeed News, covering the impact of Silicon Valley’s largest companies on the culture, society, and politics of more than a billion people in South Asia. He has also been a senior news editor at Engadget and ran technology coverage at the Hindustan Times, one of India’s largest national newspapers.Pranav’s reporting has shed light on the human consequences of Big Tech’s quest for growth in emerging markets, and sparked widespread conversations about the impact of American technology companies on the Global South. In 2019, he won Syracuse University’s Mirror Award for a boots-on-the-ground feature about how WhatsApp misinformation sparked gruesome lynchings in rural India. He has also reported from Kashmir, a volatile geopolitical hotspot, documenting the world’s longest-running internet shutdown.His work has been widely cited by major national and international publications, and he has been featured on the BBC, Al Jazeera, and podcasts such as Vox Media’s Land of the Giants to discuss his work. He has also spoken in journalism classes including at UC Berkeley’s graduate journalism program. His writing has appeared in The Guardian, Vox, Time, The Information, and Al Jazeera.Pranav moved to the United States in 2021 from New Delhi, India, to be a fellow at Harvard University’s Nieman Foundation for Journalism, where he studied the evolution of the American tech press and ways newsrooms around the world can cover technology and society more effectively.Got a tip about Meta or anything else in Silicon Valley? Contact Pranav via encrypted messaging app Signal (+1408-905-9124), or email him at [email protected] or [email protected]. You can also reach him on WhatsApp at +857-753-3949 or DM him on X (@PranavDixit) or BlueSky (@pranavdixit.bsky.social).Pranav keeps sources anonymous. Please use a non-work device to reach out.Expertise: Meta, Facebook, WhatsApp, Llama, AI, Threads, Instagram, Mark Zuckerberg, social media, platforms, immigration

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