Meta Platforms Inc. (META) just landed one of Silicon Valley's most significant design talents, hiring away Apple Inc.'s (AAPL) longtime head of human interface design, Alan Dye. The move signals Meta's serious ambitions to compete in consumer hardware and artificial intelligence, and it's the latest salvo in an increasingly expensive war for top tech talent.
Dye will join Meta as chief design officer on December 31, bringing nearly two decades of Apple experience with him. Since taking the helm of Apple's human interface design team in 2015—after joining the company back in 2006—Dye has been the creative force behind some of Apple's most defining products. Think Vision Pro headset, iPhone X, and Apple Watch. He also oversaw major redesigns of Apple's operating systems and apps, according to Bloomberg.
What Meta Gets
At Meta, Dye won't be tinkering around the edges. He'll lead an entirely new design studio responsible for hardware, software, and AI integration across consumer devices. That's a broad mandate, and it reflects how seriously Meta is taking its hardware ambitions.
Dye will report directly to Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth, who runs Reality Labs—the division responsible for Meta's wearable technologies like smart glasses and virtual reality headsets. The hire makes it clear that Meta plans to expand beyond smart glasses, building on partnerships with EssilorLuxottica brands Ray-Ban and Oakley to bring AI-enabled devices to market.
Apple Loses Ground in the Talent War
For Apple, losing Dye is a blow—and it's happening at an awkward time. The company is already dealing with executive turnover, including recent departures of COO Jeff Williams and AI chief John Giannandrea. According to Reuters, Apple has tapped veteran designer Stephen Lemay to succeed Dye. Lemay has been central to designing every major Apple interface since 1999, so he's not exactly a consolation prize. But the optics aren't great.
The reality is that Meta has been aggressively raiding Apple's talent pool, particularly in AI. Earlier in 2025, Meta ramped up recruitment by hiring former Apple engineers Mark Lee and Tom Gunter for its Superintelligence Labs team. Those hires came after Meta recruited their former boss, Ruoming Pang, Apple's ex-head of large language models. Pang reportedly joined Meta with a multiyear package exceeding $200 million.
Meta has also added AI talent from OpenAI and Anthropic, including Yuanzhi Li and Anton Bakhtin, as part of its aggressive expansion of the superintelligence unit. Lee and Gunter played key roles on Apple's Foundation Models team, and Gunter is among a growing group of AI experts at Meta receiving seven-figure, multiyear deals.
It's All About the Money
Why is Meta winning this talent war? Simple: compensation. According to reports, Meta capitalized on internal uncertainty at Apple over Siri and AI strategy, offering substantially higher pay than Apple to attract top engineers. Meanwhile, Apple has offered raises to retain its core AI staff, but insiders say the packages lag Meta's.
Both companies are performing well financially. The $1.6 trillion market cap Meta has gained over 9% in stock value year-to-date. The $4.2 trillion Apple has gained over 13%.
Price Action: Meta Platforms shares were up 3.59% at $662.58 and Apple shares were down 0.43% at $282.93 at the time of publication on Thursday.