完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
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#1 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
Intel to Lay Off Over 10,000 Employees with No Severance
Massive Workforce Reduction to Begin in July
by Anochie Esther June 22, 2025
In a move set to reshape the global semiconductor landscape, Intel Corporation will lay off between 15% and 20% of its Intel Foundry division workforce beginning July 2025. The reduction impacting more than 10,000 employees worldwide marks one of the most severe rounds of job cuts in Intel’s history and signals a significant shift in how the company intends to operate amid financial and strategic headwinds.
The cuts are part of a broader restructuring effort spearheaded by Intel’s new CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, who assumed leadership in March 2025. These layoffs follow two earlier rounds in the past year, bringing total job eliminations to over 35,000 positions since August 2024.
“Difficult But Essential,” Says Manufacturing VP
In an internal memo sent over the weekend and reviewed by The Oregonian, Naga Chandrasekaran, Intel’s Vice President of Manufacturing, acknowledged the emotional toll of the impending layoffs.
“These are difficult actions but essential to meet our affordability challenges and current financial position of the company. It drives pain to every individual,” Chandrasekaran wrote.
The memo highlighted that the layoffs will span across 15 wafer fabrication plants in 10 global locations, impacting a wide range of positions from cleanroom floor technicians and material handlers to senior R&D engineers working on next-generation microprocessors.
No Severance Packages Offered
In a stark departure from past precedent, no severance packages or voluntary buyouts will be offered to affected employees. Instead, Intel will make decisions based on a combination of performance evaluations, skill assessments, strategic portfolio adjustments, and project prioritization.
“These reductions will be based on a combination of portfolio changes, level and position elimination, skill assessment for remaining positions, and some hard decisions around our project investments,” Chandrasekaran noted. “We are also taking into consideration factory operations impact.”
By eliminating voluntary departure incentives, Intel is signaling a more aggressive cost-cutting strategy, prioritizing operational efficiency over employee sentiment.
A Major Step in CEO Tan’s Restructuring Plan
These layoffs are central to CEO Lip-Bu Tan’s broader strategy to reimagine Intel’s corporate structure and restore its engineering leadership. Since taking the reins in March, Tan has openly criticized the company’s layers of bureaucracy and its sluggish response to technological shifts especially in AI and high-performance computing.
“I’m a big believer in the philosophy that the best leaders get the most done with the fewest people,” Tan wrote in a company-wide memo in April.
Tan’s vision includes slashing more than 20% of Intel’s total workforce, restructuring business units, reducing management layers, and refocusing investment on Intel’s core semiconductor engineering and manufacturing capabilities.
Intel’s headcount has already declined from 125,000 employees in 2023 to roughly 109,000 by the end of 2024, and these upcoming cuts will likely reduce that number even further, to below 95,000.
The July 2025 cuts represent Intel’s third major layoff round in under a year. The first, under former CEO Pat Gelsinger, came in August 2024, when the company slashed 15,000 jobs and implemented a $10 billion cost-cutting initiative. That wave was accompanied by early retirement incentives and voluntary buyouts options now absent under Tan’s more austere approach.
Earlier in March 2025, another round of layoffs further reduced Intel’s global footprint. This third and largest round intensifies Tan’s efforts to transform Intel into a leaner, faster-moving company that can better compete in a rapidly evolving industry dominated by Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC.
The layoffs come at a turbulent time for Intel. The company reported an $821 million net loss in Q1 2025, reflecting continued challenges in its core PC and data center markets. While rivals like Nvidia have seen surging growth thanks to demand for AI chips, Intel has struggled to stake its claim in the artificial intelligence boom.
Complicating matters is the delay in funding from the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act, which has so far failed to deliver the $7.9 billion subsidy Intel was promised for domestic chip manufacturing. With the Trump administration re-evaluating award allocations, Intel’s future in U.S.-based chip fabrication remains uncertain.
Not all employees will face the axe. The memo confirmed that key technical roles, such as process engineers, equipment technicians, and lithography specialists working on Intel’s most advanced nodes, will largely be protected. These roles are critical to Intel’s long-term roadmap, especially as it seeks to close the technology gap with TSMC and Samsung.
However, positions made redundant by automation, as well as roles in bloated management tiers or overlapping administrative functions, are expected to be heavily impacted.
Intel’s decision to proceed with the largest job cut in its recent history with no severance, no voluntary exits, and a performance-based selection model underscores the urgency of its current transformation. As competitors seize market share and global supply chains shift, Intel is betting that tough decisions today will fuel a more agile and competitive tomorrow.
But with thousands of livelihoods in the balance and investor confidence wavering, only time will tell if this high-stakes gamble pays off.
Massive Workforce Reduction to Begin in July
by Anochie Esther June 22, 2025
In a move set to reshape the global semiconductor landscape, Intel Corporation will lay off between 15% and 20% of its Intel Foundry division workforce beginning July 2025. The reduction impacting more than 10,000 employees worldwide marks one of the most severe rounds of job cuts in Intel’s history and signals a significant shift in how the company intends to operate amid financial and strategic headwinds.
The cuts are part of a broader restructuring effort spearheaded by Intel’s new CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, who assumed leadership in March 2025. These layoffs follow two earlier rounds in the past year, bringing total job eliminations to over 35,000 positions since August 2024.
“Difficult But Essential,” Says Manufacturing VP
In an internal memo sent over the weekend and reviewed by The Oregonian, Naga Chandrasekaran, Intel’s Vice President of Manufacturing, acknowledged the emotional toll of the impending layoffs.
“These are difficult actions but essential to meet our affordability challenges and current financial position of the company. It drives pain to every individual,” Chandrasekaran wrote.
The memo highlighted that the layoffs will span across 15 wafer fabrication plants in 10 global locations, impacting a wide range of positions from cleanroom floor technicians and material handlers to senior R&D engineers working on next-generation microprocessors.
No Severance Packages Offered
In a stark departure from past precedent, no severance packages or voluntary buyouts will be offered to affected employees. Instead, Intel will make decisions based on a combination of performance evaluations, skill assessments, strategic portfolio adjustments, and project prioritization.
“These reductions will be based on a combination of portfolio changes, level and position elimination, skill assessment for remaining positions, and some hard decisions around our project investments,” Chandrasekaran noted. “We are also taking into consideration factory operations impact.”
By eliminating voluntary departure incentives, Intel is signaling a more aggressive cost-cutting strategy, prioritizing operational efficiency over employee sentiment.
A Major Step in CEO Tan’s Restructuring Plan
These layoffs are central to CEO Lip-Bu Tan’s broader strategy to reimagine Intel’s corporate structure and restore its engineering leadership. Since taking the reins in March, Tan has openly criticized the company’s layers of bureaucracy and its sluggish response to technological shifts especially in AI and high-performance computing.
“I’m a big believer in the philosophy that the best leaders get the most done with the fewest people,” Tan wrote in a company-wide memo in April.
Tan’s vision includes slashing more than 20% of Intel’s total workforce, restructuring business units, reducing management layers, and refocusing investment on Intel’s core semiconductor engineering and manufacturing capabilities.
Intel’s headcount has already declined from 125,000 employees in 2023 to roughly 109,000 by the end of 2024, and these upcoming cuts will likely reduce that number even further, to below 95,000.
The July 2025 cuts represent Intel’s third major layoff round in under a year. The first, under former CEO Pat Gelsinger, came in August 2024, when the company slashed 15,000 jobs and implemented a $10 billion cost-cutting initiative. That wave was accompanied by early retirement incentives and voluntary buyouts options now absent under Tan’s more austere approach.
Earlier in March 2025, another round of layoffs further reduced Intel’s global footprint. This third and largest round intensifies Tan’s efforts to transform Intel into a leaner, faster-moving company that can better compete in a rapidly evolving industry dominated by Nvidia, AMD, and TSMC.
The layoffs come at a turbulent time for Intel. The company reported an $821 million net loss in Q1 2025, reflecting continued challenges in its core PC and data center markets. While rivals like Nvidia have seen surging growth thanks to demand for AI chips, Intel has struggled to stake its claim in the artificial intelligence boom.
Complicating matters is the delay in funding from the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act, which has so far failed to deliver the $7.9 billion subsidy Intel was promised for domestic chip manufacturing. With the Trump administration re-evaluating award allocations, Intel’s future in U.S.-based chip fabrication remains uncertain.
Not all employees will face the axe. The memo confirmed that key technical roles, such as process engineers, equipment technicians, and lithography specialists working on Intel’s most advanced nodes, will largely be protected. These roles are critical to Intel’s long-term roadmap, especially as it seeks to close the technology gap with TSMC and Samsung.
However, positions made redundant by automation, as well as roles in bloated management tiers or overlapping administrative functions, are expected to be heavily impacted.
Intel’s decision to proceed with the largest job cut in its recent history with no severance, no voluntary exits, and a performance-based selection model underscores the urgency of its current transformation. As competitors seize market share and global supply chains shift, Intel is betting that tough decisions today will fuel a more agile and competitive tomorrow.
But with thousands of livelihoods in the balance and investor confidence wavering, only time will tell if this high-stakes gamble pays off.
上次由 snowman 在 2025年 6月 26日 11:59 修改。
中美大船,相向而行,无可奈何花落去。
夫妻梦碎,卖国求辱,同房丫鬟也将就。
沐猴而冠, 傻不厌诈,搬起石头砸自己脚.
三分像人,七分像鬼,英雄做不了奴才也难当
#2 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
你鳖文化反向输出了
中美大船,相向而行,无可奈何花落去。
夫妻梦碎,卖国求辱,同房丫鬟也将就。
沐猴而冠, 傻不厌诈,搬起石头砸自己脚.
三分像人,七分像鬼,英雄做不了奴才也难当
-
- 著名点评
juderiverman 的博客 - 帖子互动: 241
- 帖子: 3409
- 注册时间: 2022年 9月 28日 08:36
#3 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
这是利好,还是利空?
“We achieve inner peace when our schedule aligns with our values.”
#6 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
自己找一下你这段话中的问题
中美大船,相向而行,无可奈何花落去。
夫妻梦碎,卖国求辱,同房丫鬟也将就。
沐猴而冠, 傻不厌诈,搬起石头砸自己脚.
三分像人,七分像鬼,英雄做不了奴才也难当
#10 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
这个不给package 的决定就是三哥推的呀,年底提成肯定又涨了
中美大船,相向而行,无可奈何花落去。
夫妻梦碎,卖国求辱,同房丫鬟也将就。
沐猴而冠, 傻不厌诈,搬起石头砸自己脚.
三分像人,七分像鬼,英雄做不了奴才也难当
#12 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
?
中美大船,相向而行,无可奈何花落去。
夫妻梦碎,卖国求辱,同房丫鬟也将就。
沐猴而冠, 傻不厌诈,搬起石头砸自己脚.
三分像人,七分像鬼,英雄做不了奴才也难当
-
- 论坛元老
wanmeishijie 的博客 - 帖子互动: 2266
- 帖子: 71270
- 注册时间: 2022年 12月 10日 23:58
#15 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
我鳖裁员保底N+1,好的如华为有N+2呢
理解了老将是代入狗的视角之后,你就理解了老将
viewtopic.php?t=120513
理解了它们是代入狗的视角之后,它们为什么会嘲笑不愿意当狗的人,以及为什么会害怕想要反抗的人,就都可以理解了:
“放着好好的狗不当”

#17 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
能做到的本土公司极少,你鳖现在大厂受到裁员压力的时候,普遍降薪司空见惯。
中小公司则流行“反向volunteer ": 先宣布裁员,然后让员工给自己薪金一个“合理评估”,按照评估高低排序,从顶部往下裁。
留下来的则按照自己自愿的薪金发工资
中美大船,相向而行,无可奈何花落去。
夫妻梦碎,卖国求辱,同房丫鬟也将就。
沐猴而冠, 傻不厌诈,搬起石头砸自己脚.
三分像人,七分像鬼,英雄做不了奴才也难当
#18 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
华人CEO,还能指望什么?
上次由 noid2 在 2025年 6月 26日 13:55 修改。
笑口常开,常笑人间可笑之人事
只谈逻辑,不谈政治
我来这不是教育廊庑的,而是提醒傻博士不要上当受骗的。
中国有历史,中国人没有,一周记忆而已。
只谈逻辑,不谈政治
我来这不是教育廊庑的,而是提醒傻博士不要上当受骗的。
中国有历史,中国人没有,一周记忆而已。
#19 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
记着我这话,华人当领导比阿三还坏
x1

笑口常开,常笑人间可笑之人事
只谈逻辑,不谈政治
我来这不是教育廊庑的,而是提醒傻博士不要上当受骗的。
中国有历史,中国人没有,一周记忆而已。
只谈逻辑,不谈政治
我来这不是教育廊庑的,而是提醒傻博士不要上当受骗的。
中国有历史,中国人没有,一周记忆而已。
#20 Re: 完了,Intel 够狠,裁员连package 都没有
三哥华人都裁美华
x1

笑口常开,常笑人间可笑之人事
只谈逻辑,不谈政治
我来这不是教育廊庑的,而是提醒傻博士不要上当受骗的。
中国有历史,中国人没有,一周记忆而已。
只谈逻辑,不谈政治
我来这不是教育廊庑的,而是提醒傻博士不要上当受骗的。
中国有历史,中国人没有,一周记忆而已。