Algorand (ALGO) Foundation Hires Key Engineers After 25% Workforce Cut
Timothy Morano Mar 27, 2026 17:30
ALGO Foundation brings on cryptography expert Chris Peikert as CSO and four engineers from Algorand (ALGO) Technologies following recent layoffs and ecosystem unification.
Just nine days after cutting 25% of its workforce, Algorand (ALGO) Foundation is selectively rebuilding with five strategic hires from Algorand Technologies, signaling a shift toward consolidating core protocol development under one roof.
The moves follow the March 19 announcement that protocol and ecosystem operations would unify under the Foundation. ALGO trades at $0.08, down 3% over 24 hours, with a market cap of $748 million.
Peikert Takes Chief Scientific Officer Role
Chris Peikert, previously Head of Cryptography at Algorand Technologies, now serves as Chief Scientific Officer. The hire carries weight—Peikert is a Fellow of the International Association for Cryptologic Research and holds the Arthur W. Burks Collegiate Professor position at the University of Michigan.
His specialty? Lattice-based and post-quantum cryptography. He earned his Ph.D. from MIT under Silvio Micali, Algorand's founder, and joined the company in January 2021 specifically to integrate quantum-resistant security into core protocols.
That work continues. Post-quantum security has become increasingly relevant as quantum computing advances threaten current cryptographic standards. NIST's ongoing standardization process has drawn heavily from Peikert's research contributions.
Protocol Engineering Gets New Leadership
The Foundation also brought over four engineers to form its protocol development backbone. John Jannotti takes Senior Vice President of Protocol Engineering, leading the team directly. Pavel Zbitskiy and another unnamed engineer joined as Principal Protocol Engineers, while John Lee came aboard as Director of Protocol Infrastructure.
These aren't fresh recruits—they're transferring institutional knowledge from Algorand Technologies as part of the ecosystem consolidation.
Reading Between the Lines
The timing raises questions. The Foundation laid off a quarter of staff on March 18, citing macro uncertainty and crypto market conditions. CTO departure followed on March 23. Now, targeted hires from the technology arm suggest the cuts weren't about reducing capability—they were about restructuring who does what.
By centralizing protocol development under the Foundation while trimming other areas, Algorand appears to be doubling down on technical infrastructure at the expense of broader operations. The Foundation explicitly tied these hires to "payments, asset tokenization, and decentralized financial infrastructure."
Whether this leaner, more focused structure translates to meaningful protocol advancement remains to be seen. The next major test comes whenever Algorand ships its post-quantum security upgrades—now squarely Peikert's responsibility to deliver.
Image source: Shutterstock- algorand
- algo
- blockchain hiring
- post-quantum cryptography
- protocol development




