Crypto.com Cuts 300+ Roles: The New Normal for AI-Driven Layoffs

"Roles that do not adapt in our new world." That's how Crypto.com's CEO described the 12% of staff being let go. The reason? AI. And they're not alone.

On March 19, 2026, Crypto.com announced it would cut roughly 180 employees — about 12% of its workforce. CEO Kris Marszalek didn't mince words: the layoffs were driven by AI integration, and the company needed to move fast to stay competitive.

Key Numbers

  • Crypto.com: 12% workforce reduction (~180 roles)
  • Block (Jack Dorsey): 40% cut — nearly 4,000 roles
  • Both companies: Explicitly cited AI efficiency as the driver
  • Pattern: This is Crypto.com's fourth major layoff round since 2022

What Crypto.com Said

In a company-wide memo, Marszalek framed the cuts as necessary for survival:

"This is a do-or-die moment. AI is fundamentally changing how we operate. Roles that do not adapt in our new world are being eliminated."

— Kris Marszalek, CEO, Crypto.com

The company emphasized that AI wasn't just a tool — it was replacing functions entirely. Customer support, compliance checks, and even some trading operations are being automated.

The Bigger Picture: Block's 40% Cut

Crypto.com isn't an isolated case. In early March 2026, Jack Dorsey's Block announced it would cut 40% of its workforce — nearly 4,000 people — with AI cited as a key driver.

Block's AI Leap

Block's CFO explained the decision in a Fortune interview: over 18 months, AI systems had become capable of handling work that previously required hundreds of employees. The company's margins were under pressure, and AI offered a path to profitability.

The result: Nearly half the company gone, not because business was bad, but because AI made the roles unnecessary.

The New Normal?

These aren't restructuring layoffs where roles move elsewhere. They're elimination layoffs. The work is still getting done — just not by humans.

What's striking about both announcements:

What Workers Are Seeing

For employees, the message is clear: adapt or be replaced. But what does "adapt" mean when AI can do your job?

The honest answer from both companies has been sparse. Crypto.com offered severance and "support for transition." Block pointed to reskilling programs. But the scale of the cuts suggests most affected workers won't be staying — and the skills they're being asked to learn might be automated next year.

The Career Compass Take

This is the pattern workers need to watch:

Crypto.com and Block are already in Phase 3 for many functions. The question isn't whether this spreads — it's how fast.

The Honest Take

Let's be direct about what's happening here. These layoffs aren't about "efficiency" in the abstract. They're about profit margins.

AI makes it possible to do the same work with fewer people. For publicly traded companies under pressure to cut costs, that's not a hard decision. The people running these companies have a fiduciary duty to shareholders, not employees.

What's new is the openness. Crypto.com's CEO didn't hide behind "restructuring" or "market conditions." He named AI. That transparency is helpful — workers at least know what they're up against.

For workers: The "adapt" advice is real but incomplete. Adapting might mean learning to use AI tools. It might also mean recognizing that some career paths are shrinking permanently.

For companies: The ethical questions are getting harder. If your AI strategy depends on eliminating large portions of your workforce, you should probably say so earlier — and invest more heavily in transition support.

The companies that handle this well will be transparent early, generous with severance, and honest about which roles are going away forever. The ones that don't will face the same public backlash we've seen in every layoff wave.

What This Means for You

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