OpenAI has announced plans to launch a dedicated jobs platform that will use artificial intelligence to connect candidates with employers, a move aimed squarely at reshaping how recruitment works online. The service, expected to go live in mid-2026, is being designed as both a talent marketplace and a validation system, where individuals can demonstrate AI expertise and employers can quickly identify who is prepared to apply those skills.
At the center of the project is a certification system that will operate through OpenAI’s Academy. Candidates will be able to take structured assessments proving their ability to use AI tools, from prompt writing to domain-specific applications in areas like marketing, design, or software development. The certifications will be tiered, giving hiring managers a way to measure whether someone has beginner knowledge or advanced fluency. OpenAI says the pilot phase for certifications will begin later in 2025, before the full jobs platform is released.
Unlike traditional recruitment sites that mainly cater to corporate giants, OpenAI’s platform is being pitched as accessible to employers of all sizes. Local governments, trade groups, and small businesses are among the first partners lined up, with an emphasis on connecting regional economies to digital skills. For example, business associations in Texas have already expressed interest in using the system to help local companies modernize by hiring workers with proven AI competence.
The strategic push also carries broader competitive implications. LinkedIn, the dominant professional networking site, is owned by Microsoft—OpenAI’s largest backer. That puts OpenAI in the unusual position of building a product that could overlap directly with a key service provided by one of its own investors. It highlights how OpenAI is moving from being a pure AI research and product company into areas of professional networking, workforce training, and economic enablement.
If successful, the initiative would create a full pipeline: individuals train with AI tools, earn verified certifications, and then get connected directly to employers seeking those skills. The open question is whether OpenAI can replicate the massive network effects that have kept LinkedIn entrenched for years. What is clear is that the company is no longer content with just building chatbots or productivity apps—it now wants to shape how people are hired in an AI-driven economy.