The AI&Work Chronicle
Robinhood had a strange week. On June 16, the company announced it would cut about 290 workers [https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/stocks/articles/robinhood-layoffs-2026-company-cuts-144314489.html], roughly 10% of its full-time staff. The odd part is that the company is doing well. CEO Vlad Tenev told employees in a memo that “Robinhood’s business has never been stronger [https://crypto.news/robinhood-announces-layoffs-affecting-290-employees-amid-restructuring-push/].” The company reported record trading volumes in June. He framed the cuts as a way to flatten the organization and raise what he called “talent density.” Here is a detail worth noticing, though: Tenev never mentioned AI [https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/16/robinhoods-note-on-10-layoffs-shows-blaming-ai-isnt-cutting-it/] anywhere in the memo, Tech Crunch noted. He did say the company would use “frontier technologies” to push its execution further. That sounds a lot like AI without saying so. For most of this year, companies rushed to credit AI for their layoffs because investors liked the efficiency story. Now the sentiment has shifted. Blaming AI for job cuts has started to generate worker backlash. Cleverly, Robinhood appears to have read the room. Listen on Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-ai-labor-report/id1896663061] A Carmaker Launches a Product, Then Cuts the People Who Support It Rivian followed a similar path with different wording. On June 16, CNBC reported the electric vehicle maker laid off hundreds of workers in its service and customer organization [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/16/rivian-layoffs.html]. The sales and marketing teams were hardest hit. Notice the timing: the cuts came one week after Rivian began delivering its new R2 SUV, the lower-priced vehicle meant to take the company mainstream. Rivian described the move as restructuring to “profitably scale our business.” An analyst at Edmunds said out loud what a lot of people were thinking. “You have to wonder to what degree they do plan on replacing those people with some level of AI and automation,” [https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/jun/17/rivian-lays-off-hundreds-of-workers-days-after-new/] he told reporters. Rivian is pouring money into autonomous vehicle technology, including a robotaxi partnership with Uber. A company launching a product while cutting the human workforce built to support that product is a pattern service workers recognize immediately. Most of Us Now Spend More Time Managing AI Than Doing Our Jobs If you have felt lately like your job has quietly turned into babysitting AI, the data backs you up. BCG’s fourth annual AI at Work survey [https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ai-is-reshaping-jobs-faster-than-companies-are-reshaping-work-302789481.html] found that 47% of workers now spend more time managing and directing AI than doing their actual work. The June 3rd survey covered 11,749 workers across 14 markets. Frontline AI adoption hit 74%, up 23 points from last year. Among regular users, 42% report saving a full workday every week through AI. The catch is that almost no organization has figured out what workers should do with that reclaimed time. The report describes a “joy paradox” [https://enterprisedna.co/resources/news/bcg-ai-at-work-survey-strategy-gap-workers-2026/]: 67% of regular AI users say the technology has improved their job satisfaction. Forty-one percent report increased mental strain at the same time. AI is making work both better and worse, often for the same person on the same day. BUY NOW! [https://wimdodson.gumroad.com/l/gods_in_the_machine?_gl=1*19da5a0*_ga*MTEwMjE2MDkwMy4xNzc2OTY4MDQy*_ga_6LJN6D94N6*czE3NzY5NjgwNDEkbzEkZzEkdDE3NzY5NjgxNzIkajU5JGwwJGgw] Get the NEW Book that exposes the Narratives Tech uses to build its AI Empire. $4.95 flat fee for Kindle, Nook, Tablets, and Mobile. No subscription required.3.5-hr reading time. Putting AI on the Org Chart Makes Humans Sloppier Researchers at Boston Consulting Group ran a controlled study of 1,261 managers [https://www.bcg.com/news/6may2026-why-you-shouldnt-treat-ai-agents-employees] across the U.S., Canada, and the EU. They gave participants the same document full of errors, then told different groups it had been produced by a human, by an AI tool, or by a named-AI “employee.” The group that thought a named-AI employee wrote it caught 18% fewer errors. Individual accountability for the mistakes dropped by 9 percentage points. Accountability assigned to the AI rose by 8 points. In other words, the moment a company treats an AI agent like a coworker, people stop checking its work and start blaming it when something goes wrong. Oddly, more than 20% of surveyed companies have already put AI agents on their official org charts. The errors do not disappear, though. They just slip past the humans who used to catch them. BUY NOW [https://wimdodson.gumroad.com/l/invasion_ai?_gl=1*g1iey2*_ga*OTc1NjU2NTcyLjE3NzQwMzA3NjM.*_ga_6LJN6D94N6*czE3NzQwMzMyMjUkbzIkZzEkdDE3NzQwMzQ2ODgkajYwJGwwJGgw]! Get the book that examines how the AI invasion already happened. You just weren’t invited. $9.95 flat fee for Kindle, Nook, Tablets, and Mobile. No subscription required. 2-hr reading time. What Workers at Big AI Companies Are Actually Seeing Gallup surveyed 23,717 U.S. employees [https://www.gallup.com/workplace/704225/rising-adoption-spurs-workforce-changes.aspx] and found a clear split. At organizations adopting AI, 27% of workers say their workplace changed in disruptive ways over the past year. At organizations that have not adopted AI, only 17% say the same. The sharpest finding involves the largest employers. At companies of 10,000 or more that use AI, 33% of workers report their workforce shrinking versus 30% reporting growth. At large companies that have NOT adopted AI, the numbers flip: 36% report hiring more workers versus 23% reporting cuts. Half of Companies Have No Working AI Policy for HR Meanwhile, SHRM’s State of AI in HR 2026 report [https://www.shrm.org/topics-tools/research/state-of-ai-hr-2026/full-report] found that 54% of organizations either have no AI policy for HR or describe the one they have as too rigid to be useful. Only 46% plan to use AI in HR at all this year. Of the companies that do have a policy, just 25% call it clear and built to last. The AI & Work Chronicle is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. The Laws Are Coming, and Most Employers Are Not Ready That gap matters more every week, because the regulations are arriving. States are building a patchwork of AI hiring laws [https://darroweverett.com/ai-hiring-workforce-management-2026-legal-analysis-updates/] covering bias audits, impact assessments, and worker notice requirements. Colorado’s AI Act takes effect June 30. California’s SB 951, requiring 90 days notice before AI-driven layoffs affecting 25 or more workers, is still pending. No federal law requires any employer to disclose whether AI drove a job cut. Companies are deploying AI faster than they are writing the rules to govern it, and faster still than the government is writing the rules to govern them. Get full access to The AI & Work Chronicle at ailabor.substack.com/subscribe [https://ailabor.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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