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This Week in Startups
This Week in Startups•December 18, 2025

INSIDE How AI Startups hire, AI Roundtable with Wade Foster, Mikey Schulman, and Ali Ansari | E2225

In this episode, three tech CEOs discuss AI's impact on hiring, talent acquisition, training data, job displacement, and the importance of adapting to technological changes while maintaining human connection and creativity.
Creator Economy
AI & Machine Learning
Indie Hackers & SaaS Builders
Tech Policy & Ethics
Developer Culture
Jason Calacanis
Bernie Sanders
Wade Foster

Summary Sections

  • Podcast Summary
  • Speakers
  • Key Takeaways
  • Statistics & Facts
  • Compelling StoriesPremium
  • Thought-Provoking QuotesPremium
  • Strategies & FrameworksPremium
  • Similar StrategiesPlus
  • Additional ContextPremium
  • Key Takeaways TablePlus
  • Critical AnalysisPlus
  • Books & Articles MentionedPlus
  • Products, Tools & Software MentionedPlus
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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.

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Podcast Summary

In the first-ever "This Week in AI" roundtable episode, Jason interviews three tech CEOs about the future of AI hiring and talent acquisition. Wade Foster (Zapier), Mikey Schulman (Suno), and Ali Ansari (Micro1) discuss how AI is transforming the tech talent wars, the challenges of competing with massive compensation packages from Meta and OpenAI, and the shift toward hiring globally. (02:30) The conversation explores how AI tools are democratizing development capabilities, making design a bottleneck instead of engineering, and creating entirely new career paths like "human data experts." (24:10)

  • Core themes include AI's impact on hiring practices, the emergence of new job categories, training data markets, music industry disruption, and addressing concerns about job displacement and social isolation

Speakers

Wade Foster

Co-founder and CEO of Zapier, a workflow automation platform with 8,000 integrations that has been operating for 14 years. Foster has navigated multiple paradigm shifts in tech and built Zapier into a distributed company with 750 employees, positioning it as a key player in the AI agents and workflow automation space.

Mikey Schulman

CEO of Suno, an AI music generation platform that enables civilians to create production-quality music similar to how Canva democratized design. Schulman leads a team of 120 people, with most employees being musicians themselves, and has positioned Suno as a creative tool that's reshaping the music industry's relationship with AI technology.

Ali Ansari

CEO of Micro1, which started as an AI-powered engineer screening platform but pivoted to become a leading provider of training data for large language models. Ansari's company focuses on high-value verticals like finance, medical, legal, and coding, and he famously pitched Jason's team from outside a Jeni's ice cream shop three years ago.

Key Takeaways

Just Start Doing the Job You Want

The most effective way to get hired in the AI era isn't through traditional applications or interviews, but by actually demonstrating your capabilities. (24:10) Wade Foster emphasizes that high-agency creativity never goes out of style, and candidates should build prototypes, identify problems, and email solutions directly to founders. Mikey shared that Suno hired their first Android engineer who simply built an app and sent it to them, while Ali noted they hired their last two AI engineers who built prototypes of their systems. This approach works because it's easier to build now with AI tools, and it cuts through the noise of traditional hiring processes.

Design Has Become the New Bottleneck

As AI tools make coding more accessible, an unexpected shift has occurred where design is now often the limiting factor in product development. (19:55) Ali explains that Micro1 is experimenting with having engineers create prototypes first, then backtracking to create design files afterward. This represents a fundamental shift in the product development cycle, where functional prototypes can be built rapidly, but the design and user experience refinement becomes the more time-consuming process. This trend suggests that design skills may become increasingly valuable as engineering becomes more democratized.

AI Creates New High-Value Career Categories

The emergence of "human data experts" represents a new career path where subject matter experts earn significant income training AI models in specialized domains. (33:45) Ali reveals that over 200,000 people in the US are now working in AI training roles, often earning more than their day jobs while working 15-20 hours per week. These experts are getting paid to do things they're already skilled at while helping train models that will eventually assist them in their primary careers. The highest-demand areas include finance, medical, legal, and coding expertise.

Adaptability Trumps Domain Expertise

In the AI-augmented workplace, the ability to adapt and learn quickly has become more valuable than deep specialized knowledge alone. (23:02) Wade notes that the most valuable skill is not how much you know, but how adaptable you are. Senior professionals who embrace AI tools while maintaining their domain expertise are positioned to "do some insane stuff" by collapsing traditional skill stacks. The key is being able to go from zero to 80% competency in new domains rapidly, enabled by AI tools that accelerate learning curves.

Agentic Workflows Are the Current Reality

While fully autonomous agents remain elusive, the practical solution is combining deterministic workflows with strategic agent placement. (1:13:13) Wade explains that pure agents struggle with reliability when chaining multiple decisions, but "agentic workflows" work well in production. These hybrid systems use structured, deterministic workflows for most tasks while deploying agents only where LLM decision-making is truly needed. This approach delivers the reliability enterprises need while still leveraging AI capabilities for complex reasoning tasks.

Statistics & Facts

  1. Over 200,000 people in the US are now working in AI training roles, spending 15-20 hours per week training models and often earning more than their day jobs. (33:45)
  2. ChatGPT has 800 million weekly active users, demonstrating massive adoption of AI tools across society. (60:03)
  3. 100% of developers at Suno now use AI coding tools, up from just 15% about 12-18 months ago, with many non-developers also using these tools. (18:03)

Compelling Stories

Available with a Premium subscription

Thought-Provoking Quotes

Available with a Premium subscription

Strategies & Frameworks

Available with a Premium subscription

Similar Strategies

Available with a Plus subscription

Additional Context

Available with a Premium subscription

Key Takeaways Table

Available with a Plus subscription

Critical Analysis

Available with a Plus subscription

Books & Articles Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

Products, Tools & Software Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

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