The fear is real. In meetings, Slack chats, and after-work drinks, one question is quietly eating away at millions of employees: Will AI take my job?
In public, CEOs like to sound reassuring. They say generative AI will “enhance productivity” or “streamline operations.” But when you actually read what they’re telling their own employees, or what slips out in investor memos, the message is chilling: virtual workers are here, and they’re not just assistants. They’re replacements.
Let’s take a closer look at what some of the world’s most powerful tech CEOs are saying. Not in hype videos, but in official internal messages, blog posts, and investor updates.
1. Amazon’s Andy Jassy: “We will need fewer people”
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy recently published a company-wide message that sounds reasonable, until you actually read it.
“As we roll out more generative AI and agents, it should change the way our work is done. We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today… We expect this will reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains from using AI extensively across the company.”
The key phrase? “Next few years.” That’s corporate speak for 2026 to 2028. Not ten years away. This is soon.
Jassy is not talking about automating only simple or repetitive tasks. He’s preparing employees for a reality where AI replaces entire job categories across the board, and where hiring slows or stops altogether for roles that machines can now do.
2. Duolingo’s Luis von Ahn: “Headcount will only be given if” AI can’t do the job
In a memo posted to LinkedIn, Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn was even more blunt. “Most functions will have specific initiatives to fundamentally change how they work… Headcount will only be given if a team cannot automate more of their work.”
Translation: No more hiring unless your job is impossible for AI to do. The company is betting that most teams will soon need fewer humans.
3. Shopify’s Tobi Lütke: Why can’t AI do it?
Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke shared a similar directive on X: “Before asking for more headcount and resources, teams must demonstrate why they cannot get what they want done using AI… What would this area look like if autonomous AI agents were already part of the team?” Lütke is openly asking managers to reimagine teams as if AI agents are already integrated, and to justify why any humans are still necessary.
— tobi lutke (@tobi) April 7, 2025
The message from these CEOs is clear: human employees are now the last resort. The new default is automation.
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff recently stated that AI is already doing 50% of the work within his company, shortly before announcing another 1,000 job cuts. The CEO of Klarna, a major fintech company, was even more blunt, revealing that AI has already allowed the company to reduce its workforce by 40%.
The Reality: Virtual Workers Already Exist
These aren’t future scenarios. This is already happening.
The reason for this sudden shift is the rapid evolution of AI technology. As OpenAI CEO Sam Altman explained in a recent podcast, the latest “reasoning models” have made a critical leap. In simple terms, these AI systems can now do more than just find information; they can “think” through complex, multi-step problems. Altman suggested these models can reason on par with someone holding a PhD, meaning they are now capable of performing the high level analytical tasks once reserved for highly educated humans.
This capability is being actively harnessed. Three sources working at major AI labs told Gizmodo that they are training powerful models to perform real world tasks in nearly every “knowledge work” profession, including banking, financial analysis, insurance, law, and even journalism. These sources, who requested anonymity as their contracts prohibit them from speaking publicly, described how their work is used in side by side comparisons with AI models to refine the technology until it can produce professional grade output with minimal errors. Virtual employees are already doing our jobs; the current phase is simply about making them more perfect.
The “next few years” Jassy spoke of may be closer to two years at most.
Layoffs Are Accelerating
Consider the tech industry’s recent layoff trends. In 2024, 551 tech companies laid off nearly 152,922 employees, according to data from Layoff.fyi. The pace has accelerated dramatically this year. In just the first six months of 2025, 151 tech companies have already laid off over 63,823 people. On average a tech company cut 277 workers in 2024. If that rate is maintained for the rest of the year, the average number of layoffs per tech company in 2025 would soar to 851, roughly three times the 2024 average.
While there is no direct evidence linking all these layoffs to AI, the trend is happening during a period of record economic strength. The Nasdaq just closed at an all time high, and eight of the world’s ten largest companies are in the tech sector. Profitable, growing companies are shedding workers at an alarming rate, and the quiet implementation of AI is the most logical explanation.
Our Take
Tech CEOs won’t tell you outright that you’re being replaced. But the memos speak for themselves.
AI is already here, and your company is likely building a roadmap to automate you out of your role. One internal pilot project at a time. One chatbot at a time. One hiring freeze at a time. If you want to understand what’s next for the American workforce, don’t listen to the marketing. Read the footnotes in the CEO’s blog. Because they’re already telling you the truth.