Google Offers Voluntary Exit Packages to Employees Amid AI Transformation
Google has announced voluntary exit packages for employees within its Global Business Organization (GBO) who are not fully aligned with the company’s AI-focused strategy. This is the third such program in the last eight months.
Targeted Roles and Exclusions
The program specifically targets roles in solutions teams, sales, and corporate development across the U.S.-based business unit, while protecting key client relationships. Notably, large customer sales teams and other customer-facing roles are excluded to minimize disruptions to clients.
Key roles eligible for the program include:
- Solutions teams: Focus on internal technical implementations and platform development for Google’s advertising infrastructure.
- Sales operations: Handle account planning and deal structuring, rather than direct customer relationships.
- Corporate development: Manage strategic planning and partnership evaluations.
Key Details from Chief Business Officer Philipp Schindler
Philipp Schindler, Google’s Chief Business Officer, announced the initiative via email, emphasizing that it provides an exit path for employees who may not be fully “embracing AI to have even greater impact” or those dissatisfied with the operational pace required. The memo also reiterated the company’s focus on maintaining client continuity while accelerating AI adoption internally.
Severance Packages and Program Scope
Eligible employees will receive severance packages based on their tenure and role level. However, Google has not disclosed how many employees are eligible or how many are expected to accept the offer. The program is designed to target internal support roles rather than customer-facing positions, aligning with Google’s strategic move to automate back-office functions and optimize workflows.
AI-Driven Restructuring and Competitive Pressures
The GBO plays a critical role as Google’s revenue engine, managing relationships with advertisers and partners that generate the majority of the company’s income. However, the unit faces mounting pressure to adopt AI tools for sales forecasting, campaign optimization, and customer service workflows, reflecting Google’s broader shift toward automation and efficiency across operations.
Google’s advertising business, while still highly profitable, is experiencing increased competition from Amazon’s retail media network and emerging AI-powered platforms. In response, Google has accelerated the development of tools like AI-generated ad creatives and automated bidding systems, which reduce the need for manual campaign management.
Historical Context and Workforce Adjustments
This initiative is part of a recurring pattern of workforce adjustments through voluntary buyouts. In June 2025, Google offered similar buyouts to U.S.-based employees across knowledge, marketing, central engineering, research, and communications teams. That program coincided with the enforcement of return-to-office (RTO) mandates for employees living within 50 miles of an office.
In October 2025, YouTube also offered buyouts as it restructured its product organization to focus on AI, with a spokesperson stating, “Looking to the future, the next frontier for YouTube is AI.”
Unlike the current GBO program, the June 2025 buyouts were open to employees across all roles and levels. This broader eligibility contrasts with the more targeted approach of the current initiative, which focuses specifically on internal support functions.
Voluntary Exits and RTO Mandates
Google’s strategy combines voluntary exit programs with RTO mandates to create a self-sorting mechanism. Employees who relocated during the pandemic to lower-cost areas far from Google campuses faced a choice: relocate closer to an office, accept a remote-only role with limited advancement opportunities, or take the voluntary severance package.
This dual approach allowed Google to enforce RTO policies while providing an exit option for employees unwilling to comply. However, the strategy carries the risk of losing high-performing talent, as research indicates that return-to-office mandates disproportionately impact skilled and senior employees.
Risks of Talent Drain
While voluntary buyouts offer an exit path for employees who feel misaligned with the company’s direction, they also risk accelerating the loss of top-performing talent. High performers, such as senior engineers and experienced sales directors, often have strong external job prospects and may find severance packages financially attractive. This adverse selection pattern can lead to a disproportionate loss of institutional knowledge and specialized expertise, which automated systems cannot easily replace.
Google’s AI-First Transformation Agenda
CEO Sundar Pichai has been actively promoting the adoption of AI across the company as part of a larger productivity push. The GBO voluntary exit program reflects this broader industry shift toward AI-augmented workflows. Employees are expected to adopt AI tools across their operations to improve efficiency and output quality. Teams resisting AI adoption or failing to demonstrate measurable productivity gains risk being flagged as not “all in” on the company’s strategic direction.
Commitment to Workforce Evolution
Despite offering voluntary exits, Google has committed to backfilling many of the roles left vacant, emphasizing the goal of ensuring team commitment rather than reducing overall headcount. The company continues to hire where necessary, creating opportunities for internal mobility and growth within GBO teams.