April 23 (Reuters) – Microsoft is planning its first voluntary employee buyout in the Windows maker’s 51-year history, CNBC reported on Thursday, citing a โmemo.
Like other U.S. tech giants, Microsoft has been spending aggressively on artificial โintelligence. But adoption of one of its flagship AI services, the 365 Copilot, has reached just โslightly over 3% of its total 450 million 365 customers.
The one-time retirement program will be open to U.S. workers at the senior director level and below, with a combined age and years of employment of 70 or more, CNBC reported.
“Our hope is that โthis program gives those eligible โ the choice to take that next step on their own terms, with generous company support,” Amy Coleman, Microsoft’s executive vice president โ and chief people officer, wrote in the memo viewed by CNBC.
The company is changing how it distributes stock to employees for annual rewards and managers will no longer โbe required โto tie stock directly to cash bonuses, โCNBC said. Microsoft is also simplifying โthe manager review process, reducing pay options from nine to five.
Microsoft declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.
Slowing cloud unit growth and investor concern over its heavy reliance on OpenAI have made Microsoft one of the worst-performing Big Tech stocks this year, with its shares tumbling nearly 24% from January to March – the biggest โquarterly drop since 2008.
The company in March unified โthe commercial and consumer versions of Copilot in โa restructuring that now has โMustafa Suleyman, an industry veteran and Microsoft’s AI chief, focusing โsolely on building new AI models – an โarea where analysts โsay the software giant has lagged its rivals.
The move is part of a series of wider changes at the company, including CEO Satya Nadella in โOctober handing oversight of โsome marketing and operations to Judson Althoff, CEO of Microsoftโs commercial business, โto sharpen his focus on the AI efforts.
(Reporting by Juby Babu โin Mexico City; Editing by Leroy Leo)