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Just saw StarkWare's big restructuring announcement and it's pretty significant for the ecosystem. Eli Ben-Sasson basically told everyone the company is doing major layoffs to shift into what he calls "startup mode" - basically admitting they need to get leaner and more focused on actually making money instead of just building infrastructure.
Here's what's interesting about this move. They're consolidating their verification stack - taking full ownership of Cairo, Sierra, and STARK cryptography rather than relying on external Layer 1 teams. That's a pretty deliberate pivot from being an infrastructure play to becoming a product company. The layoffs are part of that strategy.
The reorganization splits them into two main units now. You've got an Applications division that's explicitly revenue-focused, run by Avihu Levy, and a separate Starknet Development division under Tom Brand. Ran Grinshtein stays as CFO handling finance and operations, Gideon Kaempfer moved into Chief Architect role, and interestingly Oren Katz (COO) is stepping down at the end of April.
What does this actually mean? The layoffs signal they're getting serious about profitability and product-market fit rather than just scaling infrastructure. A lot of these infrastructure companies have been burning capital for years - StarkWare seems to be saying that's over. They want to control their own destiny by building products that generate actual revenue.
I think this is worth watching because it could set a pattern for other infrastructure projects. When you can't rely on endless funding, you have to actually build things people want to pay for. Curious to see what the Applications division actually ships.