Meta Makes AI Adoption a Formal Part of Performance Reviews
In a first for big tech, Meta is now grading its employees on how well they use AI. The policy, first implemented last year, is now fully active.
The pathway to implementation began in 2025, when Meta employees were told to start documenting their “AI-driven impact.” According to internal communications, Janelle Gale, Meta’s head of People, laid the groundwork:
“As we move toward an AI-native future, we want to recognize people who are helping us get there faster,” she wrote.
In 2026, that usage has become a formal part of employee evaluations. It now influences promotions, bonuses, and career trajectories. Managers are now using guidelines to assess how effectively employees leverage Meta’s suite of internal AI tools, like its coding assistant, Metamate, and other productivity bots, to accelerate work and improve outcomes.
A new report from The Information, highlighted by WebProNews, explained that “engineering managers at the Menlo Park-based company now evaluate workers partly on their ability to leverage these systems to accelerate development cycles and improve code quality.”
Meta’s approach may feel aggressive, but it highlights a broader reality: AI skills are rapidly becoming as essential in tech as coding or collaboration.
Employees push back… but Meta says AI push is needed
Some employees have expressed that this new policy feels like micromanagement. They worry it penalizes those in specialized roles where AI tools are less applicable, as well as more experienced workers accustomed to traditional methods.
Meta’s leadership, however, sees it as a necessary push. The company has invested significant sums into AI, embedding it into core products. In a recent business update, Meta stated that AI is key to “transform how we work” and drives results like a “3.5% lift in ad clicks on Facebook.”
Yet, adoption was uneven. WebProNews reported that “internal surveys revealed that significant portions of its engineering workforce were not consistently utilizing available tools.” The performance review link is a direct solution to that lag.
To ease the transition, Meta rolled out training and gamification. There’s an internal game, “Level Up,” where employees earn badges for AI milestones. The company also provides an “AI Performance Assistant” that combines Metamate with Google’s Gemini to help staff draft their reviews, as noted by WinBuzzer.
But this support comes with a layer of tracking. The company has dashboards monitoring AI tool adoption across teams, creating a data layer that informs management.
A new corporate standard for AI?
All of Silicon Valley is watching, potentially weighing the pros and cons of such a policy. Giants like Microsoft and Google are pushing hard for AI adoption, but haven’t yet formally tied it to reviews.
If Meta’s aggressive move yields faster innovation and tangible business results without a major morale crash, it could become the new playbook for the tech industry — and eventually, corporate America.
Whether the approach delivers measurable productivity gains or sparks resistance will become clearer as the mandate fully takes effect in 2026.
Check out our cool AI tools for beginners roundup, including Perplexity AI, Napkin AI, and Make.
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