Today in Apple history: Massive layoffs clear out Apple’s ‘bozo explosion’
On February 25, 1981, Apple CEO Michael Scott oversaw mass layoffs, then held a massive party marking the end of the "bozo explosion."
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Today in Apple history: Massive layoffs clear out Apple’s ‘bozo explosion’
By Luke Dormehl • 7:28 am, February 25, 2026
This was one of the worst (and one of the most significant) days in Apple history.
Photo: Bonhams
[February 25 Today in Apple history: Apple layoffs: Black Wednesday clears out the 'bozo explosion']
February 25, 1981: Original Apple CEO Michael Scott oversees a mass firing of employees, then holds a massive party. The Apple layoffs follow a hiring boom that led to what Scott called a “bozo explosion” at the company. They also stand as an early sign that the fun startup culture of Apple’s early days are gone forever.
“I used to say that when being CEO at Apple wasn’t fun anymore, I’d quit,” he tells a crowd of Apple staffers. “But now I’ve changed my mind — when being CEO isn’t fun anymore, I’ll just fire people until it is fun again.”
For many people at Apple, the day is the worst in the company’s history.
Black Wednesday: Apple layoffs follow ‘bozo explosion’
At the time of the 1981 layoffs, Apple was growing incredibly quickly. With almost 2,000 people on the payroll, Scott thought the company had simply grown too big, too fast. The expansion led to what he dubbed a “bozo explosion,” with Apple employing people he did not consider A-players. (To learn how to avoid a bozo explosion at your company, read Apple evangelist Guy Kawasaki’s list of the top 10 “signs of bozosity.”)
Scott started the layoffs process by asking each departmental manager for a list of staffers that Apple could cut loose. He then compiled these names into a memo and circulated the list, seeking nominations for 40 people who would face the ax. Scott then personally fired these people in a mass layoff that became known as Apple’s “Black Wednesday.”
“Usually shakeups within companies happen when things are going badly,” Andy Hertzfeld, then a systems programmer at Apple, told me for my book The Apple Revolution. “Black Wednesday was one of a number of shakeups which took place at Apple when things were going great. Sales were doubling almost every month, so that was a little unusual I would say.”
An ill-timed joke and ‘one of the ugliest things I’ve ever seen’
At the end of the day, Scott assembled the remaining Apple staffers. In an attempt to lighten the mood, he made his joke about firing people until Apple became fun again. This would have been bad at any time. Unfortunately, it turned out that the Apple layoffs kept coming.
“Meanwhile, there are managers circulating through the crowd, tapping people on the shoulder, because as it turns out, they hadn’t finished firing people yet,” Bruce Tognazzini, who worked as an Apple interface designer at the time, told me. “So people are getting pulled out of the garage one by one and told they no longer have a job. It was one of the ugliest things I’ve ever seen. If you were at the bottom of the pyramid, you typically got fired because your boss did. People were made to feel that they were useless, when they weren’t. It was just a terrible thing.”
Apple transitions into a serious company after bozo explosion
In the aftermath of the Black Wednesday layoffs, a few Apple employees tried to start a union called the Computer Professionals Union. Their first meeting never happened. For many workers, the layoffs marked the point at which Apple transitioned from a fun startup into a serious company with a ruthless adherence to the bottom line.
To put it another way, Apple grew up at this point. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak was on his way out. And Steve Jobs had cut his long hair and begun dressing like a businessman.
To many people, it seemed like committee-driven projects such as the ill-fated Apple III would soon become the norm in Cupertino.
Ultimately, this turned out to be the beginning of the end for Mike Scott as Apple CEO, too. The layoffs generated such bad feelings that influential Apple investor Mike Markkula demoted his friend Scott to the role of vice chairman. Markkula then stepped into the breach himself to keep the peace. Scott only stayed at Apple for a couple more months.
Luke Dormehl is a U.K.-based journalist and author, with a background working in documentary film for Channel 4 and the BBC. He is the author of The Apple Revolution and The Formula: How Algorithms Solve All Our Problems … and Create More, both published by Penguin/Random House. His tech writing has also appeared in Wired, Fast Company, Techmeme and other publications.
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