Jensen Huang: CEOs Using AI to Fire People Have "No Imagination"
NVIDIA's CEO just delivered the sharpest rebuke to AI-driven layoffs yet: "If your CEO is using AI to cut headcount, it means they have no imagination. They have no vision for what comes next."
In a recent interview with Jim Cramer, Jensen Huang—CEO of NVIDIA, the company whose chips power virtually every AI system on Earth—delivered a striking critique of corporate America's approach to artificial intelligence. His message cuts through the noise of layoffs and "AI efficiency" headlines with surgical precision.
Asked why companies are firing people if AI is supposed to make everyone more productive, Jensen's answer was blunt:
"For companies with imagination, you will do more with more. For companies where the leadership is just out of ideas, they have nothing else to do. They have no reason to imagine greater than they are. When they have more capability, they don't do more."
— Jensen Huang, NVIDIA CEO
The $1-2 Billion Per Week Revelation
But the interview contained something even more significant: a window into the actual financial reality of leading AI companies.
Jensen revealed that AI startups like OpenAI and Anthropic are seeing their revenues increase by one to two billion dollars per week. He expressed frustration that these companies aren't public, because he believes the world deserves to see what he sees.
📊 AI Revenue Reality Check
That's a $50 to $100 billion annualized run rate—for companies that much of Wall Street still believes are burning cash and making nothing. The narrative that "AI companies aren't profitable" may be fundamentally wrong.
"You're Not Innovating. You're Surrendering."
Jensen's critique of AI-driven layoffs goes beyond corporate criticism—it's a philosophical statement about what technology is supposed to do.
The man who built the most important tech company on Earth, whose chips enable every major AI system, could easily justify the "AI replaces workers" narrative. Instead, he said the opposite:
"Every carpenter could become an architect. Every plumber could become an architect. AI elevates capability. It doesn't eliminate it."
— Jensen Huang
His message to CEOs using AI to justify layoffs was equally direct:
"You're not innovating. You're surrendering. The technology wasn't built to shrink companies. It was built to make them limitless. If your leadership can't see that, the problem isn't AI. It's THEM."
The Contrast: Who's Hiring vs. Who's Firing
Jensen backed his words with numbers. NVIDIA has added $500 billion in new orders in 5 months. He expects $1 trillion in cumulative revenue through 2027 from just two product lines. That figure doesn't include new chips, systems, or partnerships announced this week.
And NVIDIA is hiring.
Meanwhile:
- Salesforce: Cut thousands
- Meta: Cut thousands
- Amazon: Cut thousands
- All citing "AI efficiency"
The pattern is unmistakable. Companies building AI products are growing and hiring. Companies using AI as an excuse to cut costs are shrinking and firing.
The Denny's Origin Story
There's something poetic about Jensen's perspective. Cramer asked if he ever imagined building a $10-20 trillion company while waiting tables at Denny's.
His response: "I was just trying to make it through the shift."
The biggest tip he ever received? Two, three dollars. Now he's building technology that increased computing demand by one million times in two years. He announced OpenClaw, which he says is as big as ChatGPT. He's got 21 months of backlog business not even counted in that trillion-dollar figure.
When asked how long he plans to keep working: "I'm hoping to die on the job. And I'm not hoping to die anytime soon."
This is a man who genuinely believes in what he's building—not just financially, but philosophically.
What This Means for Workers
The implications of Jensen's message are significant:
- AI isn't the problem—leadership is. If your company is using AI to justify layoffs, the issue isn't technology; it's a failure of imagination at the top.
- The AI economy is real. Revenue growth at leading AI companies suggests the industry is generating substantial value, not just burning investment capital.
- Innovators are hiring. Companies creating AI products need people. Companies merely consuming AI to cut costs may be revealing their limitations.
- The carpenter-architect metaphor matters. AI has the potential to elevate human capability dramatically—but only when leaders choose to use it that way.
The Bottom Line
Jensen Huang's interview is a rare moment of clarity in the noise of AI headlines. He's not a theorist or a commentator—he's the CEO of the company that makes the hardware enabling the entire AI revolution. If anyone has credibility on what AI means for work and business, it's him.
His message is unambiguous: Companies using AI to shrink are admitting they've run out of ideas. Companies using AI to grow are demonstrating imagination. The technology doesn't care which choice you make. It amplifies whatever you bring to it.
For workers watching their companies announce AI-driven layoffs, Jensen's words offer a stark question: Is AI the reason, or is it the excuse?
For leaders, the challenge is equally clear: What are you building?
Sources
- Ricardo on X: "Jensen Huang on AI & Layoffs" (March 20, 2026) — 942.7K views
- NVIDIA Q4 2025 Earnings Call
- Jim Cramer Interview with Jensen Huang