General Motors IT Job Restructuring
Analysis based on 7 articles · First reported May 11, 2026 · Last updated May 12, 2026
The market views General Motors' restructuring as a strategic move to enhance its competitiveness in the AI-driven automotive industry, potentially leading to long-term efficiency gains and innovation. While the layoffs may cause short-term uncertainty, the focus on AI-native capabilities is generally seen as positive for General Motors' future valuation.
General Motors has laid off approximately 600 salaried employees from its IT department, representing over 10% of its IT workforce. This move is part of a broader restructuring aimed at replacing traditional IT skill sets with expertise in AI-native development, data engineering, and cloud-based engineering. The company is actively hiring for these new AI-focused roles, indicating a 'skills swap' rather than a pure headcount reduction. This transformation has been ongoing for over 18 months, with previous cuts of about 1,000 software jobs in August 2024. The restructuring accelerated following the appointment of Sterling Anderson as Chief Product Officer in May 2025, who has pushed to consolidate General Motors' technology operations. Several senior executives, including Barış Çetinok, David Richardson, and Barak Turovsky, have departed, while new AI leadership, such as Behrad Toghi (from Apple Inc.) and Rashed Haq (from General Motors — Cruise (autonomous vehicle)), have been brought in. This reflects a wider industry trend of companies rebuilding workforces around AI-first capabilities.
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