When a company’s answer to plummeting morale is more free snacks, you can safely assume the underlying problems run a lot deeper than an empty pretzel jar. That’s reportedly the situation at Meta, where Mark Zuckerberg’s tech empire is increasing its snack budget after staff spirits hit a noticeable low.
It’s not hard to see why employees might be feeling jittery, and not from the extra caffeine. Meta has axed thousands of jobs across multiple rounds of layoffs, leaving the remaining workforce to operate under a persistent cloud of uncertainty. Few things sour the office mood faster than watching colleagues clear out their desks and wondering whether your badge still works tomorrow.
Then there’s the AI of it all. According to the source, employees have been tasked with training the very artificial intelligence systems that could one day make their own roles redundant. It’s a peculiarly modern kind of dread — being asked to teach your potential replacement how to do your job, all while someone keeps an eye on how well you’re doing it. Monitoring, in this context, doesn’t exactly inspire warm feelings about job security.
So the snack upgrade lands as something of a tone-deaf gesture. Free food has long been a staple of Big Tech perks, a small comfort that signals a company values keeping its people fed, caffeinated and at their desks. But there’s a clear ceiling on what a better-stocked pantry can accomplish. A fresh stack of protein bars and a wider selection of sparkling water won’t address the existential questions hanging over the workforce.
It’s a reminder that perks and morale are not the same thing, even if companies sometimes treat them interchangeably. Morale is built on stability, trust and a sense that your contributions matter and your position is secure. Snacks are nice. They are not a substitute for any of that.
For Meta, the gesture risks reading as a case of treating the symptom rather than the cause. The company has poured enormous resources into its AI ambitions, betting heavily on a future where these systems handle more and more of the work. Asking the current staff to build that future while quietly fearing it could cost them their livelihoods is a tension no amount of free granola will resolve.
Still, you can’t fault the gesture entirely. If you’re going to spend your day training your eventual successor under watchful eyes, at least there’s now a better class of office snack to soften the blow. Whether that translates into happier employees, or simply better-fed anxious ones, remains very much an open question.