Recruitment volume plummeted by 80%. Is the crypto talent market saturated?

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Article by: willthetrill

Translated by: Chopper, Foresight News

Is the cryptocurrency industry’s hiring market already saturated? The answer is both yes and no. Although there have been scattered layoffs in December, overall, the hiring momentum in the fourth quarter remains strong.

To uncover the truth, I specifically retrieved data from major vertical recruitment websites in the crypto industry during the first two weeks of January 2026 (excluding official corporate recruitment pages). The results show that only 85-90 new independent positions were added during this period.

The start of this year has been quite quiet. In contrast, the data from January 2025 was quite impressive, with as many as 1,192 positions posted in that month alone, making it the month with the highest recruitment volume of 2025.

Data as of January 12, 2026

In the first two weeks of January 2025, the average daily job postings were about 38; in the same period in 2026, the average daily postings dropped to only about 6.5.

Recruitment activity at the beginning of January declined by approximately 80% compared to the same period last year. This data confirms the widespread market speculation: the industry’s start this year is far less heated than last year.

Based on the detailed analysis of the above job data, the main characteristics of the current recruitment market are as follows:

  • Job Type Distribution: 60% technical/engineering roles, 40% non-technical/market expansion roles.
  • Seniority Distribution: About 65% of positions are mid-to-senior level, including specialists, senior specialists, managers, and department heads. This indicates that companies are prioritizing recruiting experienced talent to lead core product development and key projects related to business growth.
  • Experience Requirements: Most positions require candidates to have over 5 years of relevant experience; management roles typically require over 7 years.

When screening and interviewing candidates, I often ask: what currently attracts you to join the crypto industry? The answers usually boil down to two: market prediction and stablecoins. Therefore, it’s not surprising that about 60% of recruitment demand is concentrated in infrastructure teams, stablecoin projects, and payment/fintech infrastructure startups. Additionally, the talent war between platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket continues, and this competition is expected to persist.

The most aggressive hiring actions currently come from companies in the growth stage (i.e., those that have completed Series A funding or above). A quick look at several companies’ recruitment pages and Ashby platform information also confirms this conclusion.

  • Series A funded companies: Lifi Protocol has 13 open positions, Privy IO (acquired) has 10, Crossmint has 10, Coinflow Labs has 14;
  • Series B funded companies: TurnkeyHQ has 12 open positions;
  • Series C funded companies: Raincards has 49 open positions;
  • Series D funded companies: Anchorage has 66 open positions.

However, perhaps more intriguing is the change in talent flow.

I have been working full-time in crypto industry recruitment for five years and can’t help but wonder: “Has there ever been a public chain ecosystem that, like Solana, challenged Ethereum’s dominance in recruitment and developer growth?” The answer is: no, at least never on such a scale.

Looking back, other public chains like Polkadot and Cosmos have experienced phases of rapid developer growth, but they have never managed to make an impact comparable to Ethereum in market share and sustained recruitment scale.

Solana is the first ecosystem with real strength to rival Ethereum. In 2024, it set a historic record: for the first time since 2016, the proportion of new contributing developers exceeded that of Ethereum. Solana attracted over 22% of new developers in the crypto industry, while Ethereum’s share was about 16%. This phenomenon is quite rare; historically, Ethereum has almost monopolized the majority of new talent.

Data source: Electric Capital “Developer Report,” as of January 14, 2026

In the third quarter of 2025 alone, 23 Solana ecosystem projects completed funding, raising a total of $211 million, a 70% year-over-year increase in ecosystem funding.

For example: when a project completes a $13.5 million funding round (such as Raikucom in Q3 2025), its primary task is to recruit 5-10 senior engineers to build the core engineering team and market expansion team. These roles are often not listed on public recruitment sites but are recruited through investor/angel investor networks, hackathon events, and targeted headhunting.

The crypto industry is continuously evolving, and the landscape of the recruitment market will also change accordingly. Through token issuance, crypto technology has driven the maximization of internet capital markets, but the reality is that most tokens issued in the past two years have seen declining prices.

I believe that in 2026, the chain reaction of this phenomenon will gradually become apparent, affecting corporate risk financing methods, market expansion strategies, and of course, talent recruitment strategies.

Projects that stand out this year will be those with solid business fundamentals, a genuine user base, solutions to real needs, and most importantly, the ability to generate revenue.

SOL-6.4%
ETH-9.81%
DOT-5.16%
ATOM-3.55%
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