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The AI talent war among major tech companies is escalating, with firms like Meta offering extravagant $100 million signing bonuses to attract top researchers from competitors like OpenAI. But HelloSky has emerged to diversify the recruitment pool, using AI-driven data to map candidates’ real-world impact and uncover hidden talent beyond traditional Silicon Valley networks.
As AI becomes more ubiquitous, the need for the top-tier talent at tech firms becomes even more important—and it’s starting a war among Big Tech, which is simultaneously churning through layoffs and poaching people from each other with eye-popping pay packages. Meta, for example, is dishing out $100 million signing bonuses to woo top OpenAI researchers. Others are scrambling to retain staff with massive bonuses and noncompete agreements.
With such a seemingly small pool of researchers with the savvy to usher in new waves of AI developments, it’s no wonder salaries have gotten so high. That’s why one tech executive said companies will need to stop “recycling” candidates from the same old Silicon Valley and Big Tech talent pools to make innovation happen.
“There’s different biases and filters about people’s pedigree or where they came from. But if you could truly map all of that and just give credit for some people that maybe went through alternate pathways [then you can] truly stack rank,” Alex Bates, founder and CEO of AI executive recruiting platform HelloSky, told Fortune.
(In April 2025, HelloSky announced the close of a $5.5 million oversubscribed seed round from investors like Caldwell Partners, Karmel Capital, True, Hunt Scanlon Ventures as well as prominent angel investors from Google and Cisco Systems).
That’s why Bates developed HelloSky, which consolidates candidate, company, talent, investor, and assessment data into a single GenAI-powered platform to help companies find candidates they might not have otherwise.
Many tech companies pull from previous job descriptions and resume submissions to poach top talent, explained Bates, who also authored Augmented Mind about the relationship between humans and AI. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg even reportedly maintains a literal list of all the top talent he wants to poach for his Superintelligence Labs and has been heavily involved in his own company’s recruiting strategies.
But the AI talent wars will make it more difficult than ever to fill seats with experienced candidates.
Even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman lamented about how few candidates AI-focused companies have to pull from.
“The bet, the hope is they know how to discover the remaining ideas to get to superintelligence—that there are going to be a handful of algorithmic ideas and, you know, medium-sized handful of people who can figure them out,” Altman told CNBC.


