Thursday, May 21, 2026 - Bolt's CEO has defended his decision to fire the company's entire HR team, claiming they had been 'creating problems that didn't exist'.
Ryan Breslow, the co-founder and chief executive of US
fintech firm Bolt, said the department was scrapped as part of sweeping layoffs
aimed at returning the struggling business to 'start-up mode'
The company cut around 30 per cent of its workforce in April
in its fourth round of layoffs in as many years.
Speaking at a Fortune event, Breslow said: 'We had an HR
team, and that HR team was creating problems that didn't exist. Those problems
disappeared when I let them go.'
The 32-year-old added that HR professionals were more suited
to 'peacetime' conditions at larger companies rather than a start-up
environment focused on rapid growth and efficiency.
Bolt has since replaced the department with a smaller
'people operations team' responsible for employee training and support.
'We need a group of people who are very oriented around
getting things done, and there is just a culture of not getting things done and
complaining a lot,' Breslow said.
Breslow stepped down from the company in 2022 before
returning in 2025 in a bid to revive its fortunes.
He claimed Bolt had developed a culture of 'entitlement',
with some employees no longer willing to work in the leaner conditions required
after the company's decline.
'There's a sense of entitlement that had festered across the
company, and people who felt empowered, felt entitled - but weren't actually
working hard. And this is the number one thing that I had to battle,' he said.
'Ultimately, most of those people just had to be let go.'
Bolt said fewer than 40 staff were affected by the latest
cuts, which the company said were partly driven by artificial intelligence.
In a company-wide Slack message sent in April, Breslow
reportedly told employees: 'Developing products and operating in 2026 is very
different than it was in prior years, and we need to adapt as an organisation
to be leaner and more AI-centric than ever to keep up with competition.'

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