As IBM’s Q1 2025 earnings renew market faith, its layoffs and cultural shifts signal a deeper transformation. What we’ve seen today gives a clear signal that it’s time HR professionals at IBM must steer through job cuts, a stricter return-to-office mandate, and a pivot to AI-driven innovation.
On April 23, 2025, IBM released its Q1 2025 earnings, reporting $14.54 billion in revenue, a 0.6% year-over-year increase, and adjusted earnings per share of $1.60, surpassing analyst expectations. The IBM’s earnings report in April 2025 shows unbeatable software growth, particularly in Red Hat, alongside a $6 billion generative AI business. Yet, IBM stock after earnings fell 6.8% in after-hours trading, as a growing number of investors are concerned about declining consulting and infrastructure revenues. This reaction highlights a broader narrative, i.e. IBM’s pivot to AI and cost efficiency that is now reshaping its workforce and culture.
IBM layoffs, a cost-cutting reality
IBM’s 2025 earnings outlook reaffirms $13 billion in free cash flow and 5% revenue growth, however “accelerated productivity efforts” clearly mean more layoffs in 2025. Reports estimate that 5,000-9,000 job cuts in 2025, following a 4.2% headcount reduction in 2024.
A WARN notice in March 2025 confirmed 72 layoffs in Winston-Salem, NC, effective May 30, with consulting, sales, and cloud infrastructure teams hit the hardest. Employees report training Indian hires before receiving layoff notices, as IBM ramps up hiring in Bengaluru and Hyderabad, where job postings surged from 173 in January 2024 to 3,866 by early 2025.
CEO Arvind Krishna’s vision frames this as a major workforce rebalancing. “AI can replace 30% of back-office roles, like HR tasks, within five years.” This also aligns with IBM’s AI earnings in 2025, where AI-driven automation is a major driver of revenue.
As for IBM’s HR team, the challenge is glaringly obvious. There’s a lot to do, from managing severance to ensuring WARN act compliance, to mitigating morale damage amid job security.
Return-to-office mandates and DEI retreat at IBM
IBM’s culture now makes headlines every other week. A new return-to-office (RTO) mandate, effective October 2025 for sales and cloud teams, require three days a week in-office, with badge swipes monitored. Non-compliance will lead to termination, and employees far from hubs like Austin or New York face relocation or severance. Described as a “soft layoff”, the policy may drive 10–15% voluntary attrition, particularly among older workers. “It’s a way to cut headcount without headlines,” one employee told The HR Digest anonymously.
Furthermore, IBM’s public withdrawal from diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, including ending diversity-based executive incentives, has ignited a major debated. This shift, away from DEI responds to external pressures but risks alienating minority groups, challenging HR to maintain inclusive cultures without formal DEI frameworks. Krishna’s call for a “culture of innovation” emphasizes agility, by encouraging decisions with “70% confidence” but may clash with employee concerns over job security and flexibility.
What’s next for IBM’s HR team?
As IBM projects $16.58 billion in Q2 revenue, above the $16.33 billion consensus, HR must navigate this transformation. Strategies must include expanding AI reskilling and transparent communication to rebuild trust. The IBM Q2 revenue forecast offers optimism, but the IBM earnings vs forecast reveal vulnerabilities HR cannot ignore. By fostering resilience and upskilling, HR can align with Krishna’s vision while safeguarding employee morale.
The IBM Q1 surprise results signal a company in flux. For HR, the task is clear: balance cost-cutting with cultural cohesion to shape a future-ready workforce.
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