Internal chat logs from a town hall held Friday by ethereum production studio ConsenSys show that employees are grappling with uncertainty in the face of recently announced layoffs.
A day after confirming that 13 percent of its staff would be cut in what CEO Joseph Lubin called a ârestructuring of priorities,â company leadership held an all-hands meeting to field questions from members of its roughly 1,200-person team, a meeting documented in a live chat viewed by CoinDesk.
âHow many months of runway do we have?â asked one anonymous user.
âI would like to forfeit my position for a colleague (fired) whom I know will add more value to ConsenSys than me,â wrote one named employee in the chat. âIs that possible?â
While CoinDesk was able to observe the company-wide chat in real time, the corresponding, video-streamed answers from ConsenSys leadership were not viewable.
Yet because of what appears to be a reticence on the part of ConsenSys staff members to discuss the ongoing situation within the company, the chat logs present the most comprehensive snapshot to date of the major questions still roiling within one of the blockchain industryâs most notable companies.
âWe are not commenting on internal conversations,â a ConsenSys spokesman told CoinDesk on Tuesday. âQuite frankly, these tactics are beneath you and the role CD plays in the ecosystem as a source of veridical information.â
Still, the ConsenSys staff cuts could be a sign of a larger change at the startup, itself comprised of a network of projects and startups all dedicated to building out use cases on the ethereum blockchain. ConsenSys has thus far declined to share which startups, or âspokes,â will be most impacted by the cuts.
âWeâre taking a careful look at financial sustainability,â Lubin told CoinDesk in an interview last week.
On Friday, most chat participants were openly critical of the announced layoffs.
âThe wave of lay offs felt like re-enacting order 66,â wrote one anonymous staffer, making a âStar Warsâ reference. âIt looked ruthless and swift. Do the values we claim to profess and hold dear actually hold weight?â
âWho is going to be held accountable for the decisions that got us into this situation?â another wrote. âWho and how?â
Others asked directly about the financial state of the company, and itâs unclear if theyâve received answers.
âJoe [Lubin] earlier today said at the current price [around $85 per ETH] we have many months of runway. Wanted to clarify if that was correct?â one user asked. âThought runway was previously stated as years.â
Though some chat participants used names that correspond with those of current ConsenSys employees, itâs impossible to verify if other outsiders also participated. Even without corresponding answers, the questions themselves reflect internal sentiment as ConsenSys embarks on a course of belt-tightening and business-minded accountability.
Criticisms aside, some chat participants struck an optimistic tone about the moves and expressed support for the âConsenSys 2.0â vision first laid out by Lubin one week prior.
âIâm glad ConsenSys went through with this and believe it should have happened much sooner,â wrote an anonymous user. âFar too many people were coasting by on Joeâs benevolence.â
âThank u for all the opps,â wrote one named staffer. âI am more determined than ever to make C2.0 a success and am proud to be here.â
While many questions remain, most agree that ConsenSysâ period of rapid growth could not continue.
âAt some point this needed to happen, but we didnât expect the change [to come] so fast,â said one recently laid-off ConsenSys employee, who CoinDesk is granting anonymity. âProbably the ETH price forced this to happen.â
ConsenSysâ ascent from a famously stickered door in Bushwick to a company with a âmeshâ of 50 ventures spanning the globe has been internally funded to date (though Lubin suggested this could change as part of the 2.0 push). And yet while payrolls have skyrocketed as ConsenSys grew, revenues have not kept pace.
As Lubin shifts his company toward more accountability and rigor, the business may also be consolidating its leadership ranks.
Many employees â both in the Friday town hall and privately to CoinDesk â have said they were surprised by the swift downsizing in a culture that had previously bucked centralized authority.
Sources with knowledge of the company have told CoinDesk that more staff cuts are likely.
âWhy doesnât the leadership team that got us here feel the need to reveal who they are?â one anonymous employee asked Friday. âWhat are they afraid of by being honest with the mesh?â
ConsenSys image via CoinDesk archives