The Memo as Artifact
Robinhood's CEO recently circulated a layoff memo that did something unusual: it drew an explicit contrast between the workers being let go and the workers the company wants to retain. The subtext, as reported by Business Insider, was pointed. This was not a restructuring framed around market conditions or strategic pivots. It was framed around workforce quality. The company was not shedding roles - it was shedding a type of worker. That distinction matters more than the layoffs themselves.
Most layoff communications obscure this distinction deliberately. Robinhood's memo made it visible. And in doing so, it exposed a question that organizational theory has not adequately resolved: what does competence actually look like inside a platform-native firm, and how does management identify it?
What Robinhood Is Actually Selecting For
Robinhood operates as a platform business. Its core product is algorithmically mediated - routing orders, surfacing recommendations, managing risk exposure through automated systems. Workers inside that organization do not just use tools; they coordinate through them. The distinction matters because, as Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin (2020) established, algorithmic work environments create fundamentally different competence requirements than traditional organizational settings. Knowing what the algorithm does is categorically different from knowing how to respond to it effectively.
The CEO's memo implies that the retained workforce possesses something the departing workforce does not. But the memo cannot name it precisely. This is not a communication failure - it is a measurement failure. Organizations like Robinhood struggle to operationalize the difference between workers who have developed genuine adaptive expertise within algorithmically structured environments and those who have accumulated procedural familiarity without structural understanding. Hatano and Inagaki (1986) called this the distinction between routine expertise and adaptive expertise. Routine experts execute known procedures reliably. Adaptive experts understand the principles behind those procedures well enough to respond when conditions change.
The Awareness-Capability Gap Inside the Firm
Here is the specific problem Robinhood's memo gesture toward without resolving: both categories of workers - those being retained and those being let go - likely believe they understand how the organization works. The workers being dismissed are not, in most cases, ignorant of the systems around them. They are aware. But awareness and capability are not the same variable, and organizational research has consistently conflated them.
Gagarin, Naab, and Grub (2024) documented this gap in media contexts, showing that algorithmic awareness does not predict effective adaptation. The same logic applies inside firms. A Robinhood employee can know that the firm's trading infrastructure is algorithmically governed, can know that certain metrics drive resource allocation decisions, and still fail to translate that knowledge into performance. The gap is not informational. It is structural - a deficit in schema rather than awareness.
Rahman (2021) described the invisible cage problem in platform work: workers are constrained by algorithmic systems they can partially observe but not fully model. What Robinhood's memo reveals is that this cage exists inside the firm as well as outside it. Internal workers face the same structural opacity as external platform participants. The firm is, in a meaningful sense, a platform for its own employees.
The Signaling Trap for Managers
The practical implication is uncomfortable. If managers cannot operationalize the competence distinction their CEO is signaling, then the layoff decision rests on proxies rather than direct measurement. Those proxies - tenure, credentials, prior role titles, performance ratings from previous periods - may systematically mismatch the actual competence the firm needs going forward. The workers retained may be those who performed well under conditions that no longer obtain. The workers dismissed may include some who had developed the adaptive capacity to navigate conditions that are just now emerging.
This is not a critique of Robinhood specifically. It is a structural problem facing any organization that has shifted toward algorithmically mediated coordination without developing the internal measurement tools to assess the competencies that environment produces. Schor et al. (2020) noted that platform dependency creates information asymmetries that disadvantage workers. The inverse is also true: it creates measurement asymmetries that disadvantage managers trying to make accurate personnel decisions.
What This Suggests for Organizational Theory
The Robinhood case is instructive precisely because the memo was unusually candid. Most firms dissolve this problem into neutral language. Robinhood named the distinction and then could not define it, which is more theoretically revealing than silence would have been. The firm knows what it wants and cannot specify it. That gap - between organizational intention and organizational measurement capacity - is where the more interesting research questions live. Platform-native firms are generating a new class of competence that existing assessment frameworks were not built to detect, and layoff memos written in the middle of that transition are, among other things, documents of that failure.
Roger Hunt