In the escalating AI arms race, Microsoft has outpaced Meta in an aggressive recruitment push by successfully poaching top-tier AI talent from Meta with multimillion-dollar compensation packages.
Microsoft’s focused and rapid hiring campaign is targeting the crème de la crème of Meta’s AI workforce, particularly those at the forefront of building Meta’s Reality Labs, GenAI infrastructure and other AI research divisions.
Meta, known for its ambitious investments in AI infrastructure and talent, quickly became a dominant player in the AI arms race when the social media giant dedicated between $64 billion and $72 billion to developing AI infrastructure. This investment is meant to support Meta’s target of deploying around 1.3 million Nvidia equivalent GPUs by the end of 2025, competitively positioning the company alongside tech giants like Microsoft, Amazon and Google in AI computing scale.
On the recruitment front, Meta has equally been aggressive. Under CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s “Zuck Bucks” initiative, the company has reportedly offered signing bonuses up to $100 million to lure AI researchers, most especially from rival firms like OpenAI. There have also been reports about some four-year compensation packages reaching $300 million, and all of this move is towards locking in the world’s leading AI talent to build the company’s “Superintelligence Labs.”
However, despite Meta’s deep pockets and bold promises, Microsoft’s recent recruitment strategy has outpaced the social media giant’s tactics in many ways.
According to documents seen by Business Insider, there are two teams at the helm of this strategy: Microsoft AI and Core AI. These two teams have special recruiting teams who search for and identify “critical AI talent.” And leading these two teams are Mustafa Suleyman, former Google DeepMind co-founder now leading Microsoft AI, and former Meta head of engineering Jay Parikh now overseeing Core AI.
Following the instruction of Microsoft, the hiring team’s identification and securing of these “critical AI talent” immediately gets the attention of the higher-ups, and in response, these talents get multimillion-dollar offers within hours; these offers include huge signing bonuses, sizable stock awards, and other financial initiatives designed to match or outmatch Meta’s offering. This hiring system makes it a very fast process, rivaling Meta’s hiring system.
The competition amongst these tech giants is reshaping the industry’s labor market and how companies continue to invest in AI infrastructure. While meta’s gargantuan AI infrastructure spending and the larger “Zuck Bucks” initiative have redefined the scale of resources poured into AI development, Microsoft’s more structured recruitment model is proving more effective at the moment.
However, the translation of these recruitment strategies into building superior AI products and technologies remain to be seen.
It is also noteworthy that this aggressive talent poaching unfolds alongside massive layoffs at both companies. In the first part of 2025, Microsoft has laid off over 15,000 employees across several teams, while Meta has cut roughly 5% of its global workforce. Yet, these cost-cutting measures have not reduced the investment AI continues to receive.
Instead, these tech giants are funnelling resources into AI research and development, meaning that they recognize that the future of technology heavily depends on breakthroughs driven by elite AI talent.