Meta taps Apple’s AI chief to expand Superintelligence Labs

Meta taps Apple’s AI chief to expand Superintelligence Labs

Tech in Asia·2025-07-09 17:00

Meta has strengthened its Superintelligence Labs by hiring Apple’s AI chief, Ruoming Pang, as part of its push to attract top-tier talent and accelerate advanced AI development.

Reports indicate that Pang joined with a multi-million-dollar compensation package.

The recruitment effort follows a mixed reception for Meta’s Llama 4 open-source AI model and the departure of senior staff.

In June, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that Meta had offered his employees bonuses of US$100 million to join the company.

Meta also has appointed Alexandr Wang, the former CEO of Scale AI, as its chief AI officer to lead the division.

Nat Friedman, the ex-CEO of GitHub, will co-lead the unit and oversee applied research and AI product development.

Other notable hires include Daniel Gross, former CEO of AI startup Safe Superintelligence, and Ruoming Pang, who previously led Apple’s Foundation Models team.

Additional key recruits include AI researchers Trapit Bansal, Shuchao Bi, Huiwen Chang, Ji Lin, and Johan Schalkwyk, among others.

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🔗 Source: Reuters

🧠 Food for thought

1️⃣ Money alone fails to win the AI talent war despite unprecedented offers

Meta’s reported $100 million compensation packages to attract OpenAI researchers represent a new extreme in tech industry recruitment, yet these financial incentives have yielded surprisingly poor results1.

Despite offering some researchers up to $300 million over four years, Meta has faced significant rejection rates, with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman confirming that none of their top talent accepted these lucrative offers2.

The talent war reveals that mission and culture increasingly outweigh compensation, with companies like Anthropic achieving an 80% retention rate compared to Meta’s 64% by focusing on ethical AI development and intellectual freedom3.

This trend explains why Meta has been forced to cast such a wide recruitment net, targeting talent from multiple competitors rather than succeeding with focused recruitment from a single company.

The strategy highlights a fundamental tension in AI development between building for profit versus purpose, with many top researchers prioritizing meaningful work over maximization of personal wealth.

2️⃣ Strategic organizational design emerges as competitive advantage in AI recruitment

While Meta’s hiring approach relies heavily on financial incentives, competing organizations are succeeding with alternative strategies focused on workplace culture and structure.

Anthropic has implemented a flat organizational structure where all technical employees share the same title, creating an environment of equality that appeals to researchers seeking collaborative environments4.

Companies leading in retention offer expanded benefits beyond compensation, including extended parental leave and wellness support, demonstrating that holistic approaches to talent management yield better results4.

The industry is experiencing a shift toward valuing seasoned engineers over new graduates, with companies increasingly focusing on experienced hires who can make immediate contributions to advanced AI systems3.

These organizational innovations suggest that the winners in the AI talent wars will be companies that build sustainable cultures rather than those relying primarily on compensation packages that may prove financially unsustainable in the long term.

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