On December 1, podcaster and venture capitalist Harry Stebbings posted on LinkedIn that candidates were 200 times more likely to get into Harvard University than they were to get a job at the $6.6 billion valuation AI startup ElevenLabs. According to his statistic, out of 180,000 applicants in the first half of the year, only 0.018% were hired by the AI voice agent platform.
That figureāextrapolated from a July spike in applicationsāmay have been hyperbole. But it still went viral. And out of tens of thousands of applications, just 132 candidates eventually got the job at ElevenLabsāindeed, much lower than Harvardās 3% to 4% admission rates.Ā
āOn average, weāre seeing more people apply every quarter,ā says Victoria Weller, VP of operations at ElevenLabs. āI hope that the high number of applicants motivates peopleāitās inspiring to work somewhere thatās hard to get in. Itās like Harvard: once youāre in, you know youāre surrounded by the best people in an inspiring environment.ā
In-demand companies are reinforcing their recruitment to cope with a volume of applications that often runs into the six figures. For example, ElevenLabs has tripled its recruitment team this year. Coinbase, which has a 0.1% hiring rate according to the company, has added AI tools to reach more candidates, surface stronger ones earlier, and support decision making.
The crypto exchange, which has a market cap of approximately $70 billion and is in the process of expanding into a financial superapp, has been long renowned for its stringent hiring process: candidates can expect six stages over 60 daysāif they make it that far. And that was before a 2025 surge and a 45% year-over-year rise in applications, totaling in the hundreds of thousands.Ā
āThe size of the applicant pool doesnāt determine the quality of your hiresāthe rigor of your system does,ā says Greg Garrison, VP, talent at Coinbase. āOur core process is largely the same, but the system has simply become more efficient and calibrated.ā
Amid greater competition for fewer roles, and applications made easier than ever thanks to LinkedIn and generative AI, vacancies can receive hundredsāeven thousandsāof rĆ©sumĆ©s within hours of going live. While this makes recruitersā jobs harder, it also works in companiesā favor: high demand and low hiring signals prestige to the labor market; only the top 0.1% make the cut.Ā
Beating the bots
Nicholas Bloom, professor of economics at Stanford University, believes companiesā eye-popping application numbers are largely bot-driven. āI know a Stanford undergrad that wrote code to apply to every job advert on a job board, and told me his friends use it too,ā he says. āThe big issue is this actually crowds out serious applicants. If you actually are in the 1% that applies by hand you have little chance of making it through.ā
As a result of such intense demand, candidates can expect greater scrutinyāparticularly at the earlier hiring stages.Ā
In many cases, candidates will have to impress AI first. With a deluge of rĆ©sumĆ©s in the inbox, ElevenLabs uses data-driven applicant tracking software Ashby to help sift the best candidates. āWe have website fields asking applicants why they want to work with us and how our mission excites them,ā says Weller. āThat means you can identify whoās autofilled their details, and clicked āsubmitā versus those that took the time to answer thoughtfully.āĀ
It means quick-fire applications are unlikely to make it through to the next round: the screening call; the first round where candidates meet someone in the hiring position. So even when the acceptance rates are so tiny, ensuring to do the basics, like thoroughly answering questionsāwithout the help of ChatGPTācould make a difference.
Beyond assessing candidatesā experience, the onus is on testing cultural fit. āThere are certain types of questions that map to our values,ā says Weller. āFor example, we look for candidates with low egos, so we ask for feedback theyāve recently receivedātheir answer can indicate their personality.ā It means that the bragging LinkedIn posts arenāt perhaps a fair reflection of what hiring managers actually want from applicants.Ā
While ElevenLabs has up to five assessment rounds in total, Coinbase candidates face the prospect of four interviews in a single stageābookended by assessments and work trials before a potential offer is made. Experienceāand persistenceāseparate the top 0.1% from the top 1%. āThe best candidates tend to stand out,ā says Garrison. āWhat separates them isnāt polishāitās evidence. Their track record speaks louder than their rĆ©sumĆ©.ā
But given the glut of applications, some of the best may slip through. Others might not even be seen at all.
Publicly posting near-zero acceptance rates is a marketing tactic, says Bloom. āSome companies love to flex on how hard it is to get a job with them. Itās a big show-off, just as colleges love tons of applications to flex on how low their yield rate is, so do some companies.ā
Standing out from the crowdĀ
Bots or not, with so many applications for the most coveted roles, itās harder to get your rĆ©sumĆ© read by the right person.
Thatās why networking becomes essential, says Mathew Schulz, founder of procurement newsletter Pennywurth. His own LinkedIn post comparing hiring rates at Ramp, the fintech that hit a $32 billion valuation last November, with Harvard admission ratesāwith just 0.23% of engineers hiredāalso went viral this year.
āItās becoming even more difficult to submit your rĆ©sumĆ© and move along the processāa vacancy has hundreds of applicants within 24 hours of going live,ā says Schulz. āSo having a mutual connection, reaching out to contacts, and actively following up on LinkedIn becomes more important.ā
With more top talent to choose from, companies can often afford to be pickier. Hiring managers are increasingly looking for candidates who are comfortable beyond their niche.Ā
āMore companies are looking for ābuildersā and ācreatorsā who can do new things, are entrepreneurial-minded, and are highly skilled,ā says Schulz. āThereās a lean towards being a generalist now versus a hyper-specialist.āĀ
In practice, that can mean increasing a skillset, taking courses, and becoming adept at new tools that vacancies demand. āItās like what they say: looking for a job becomes a full-time job,ā says Schulz.
Getting through the door might be a bigger challenge than before. But once candidates are finally opposite a hiring manager, the fundamentals remain the sameāno matter how low the acceptance rates.Ā
āGood recruitment is still finding out, āWhat drives this person? What are they good at? Are they a good fit for the company?āā says Weller.
āThat will always stay the same, regardless of what the process looks like.ā
Leave a comment