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Business Insiderabout 4 hours ago
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OpenAI researcher says early-career tech workers should treat jobs as test drives

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An OpenAI researcher advises early-career tech workers to job-hop to find their fit and market value, rejecting traditional stay-put advice.

OpenAI researcher says early-career tech workers should treat jobs as test drives

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The Big Picture
Gabriel Petersson, an OpenAI researcher, posted on X that early-career engineers should treat jobs as test drives, gathering data on teams, culture, and compensation before committing long-term. He called the advice to stay at one company 'braindead' and suggested using internships or contracts to explore options. Petersson himself job-hopped before joining OpenAI at 23, and LinkedIn's former CEO also endorsed job-hopping for more money. However, the current tech job market is tough, with layoffs up 40% in the sector and AI impacting entry-level roles. Petersson acknowledged that while some engineers strike it rich at startups, most waste years at bad companies, making early exploration valuable.
Why It Matters
This advice from an OpenAI researcher reflects a growing tension in tech: while job-hopping can help early-career engineers find their value and ideal fit, it comes at a risky time with rising layoffs and AI disrupting entry-level roles. The debate underscores a shift in career norms, where traditional loyalty is being questioned in favor of rapid data-gathering, but the current market makes such moves more precarious.

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Job-hopping could help early-career engineers find their value, a top OpenAI researcher wrote on X.

Tara Moore/Getty Images

  • An OpenAI researcher wrote an X thread defending "job-hopping."
  • He said it could help early-career engineers find a fit and know their value before committing to a company.
  • Still, it's a tough time to job-hop, especially in the tech sector, recent data suggests.

Gabriel Petersson said he doesn't think young workers need to avoid the dreaded "job-hopper" label.

In several X posts on Sunday, the OpenAI researcher said young tech workers should test out different teams before anchoring themselves to one company.

His view: early-career engineers need data points — on research projects, culture, and their own market value — before making a long-term bet. He called the traditional stay-put advice "braindead."

"Please don't take the advice that you should stay at a company long and 'not hop around' for your first jobs," he wrote.

please don't take the advice that you should stay at a company long and "not hop around" for your first jobs

it's absolutely braindead to decide on a long term bet with zero datapoints on what a good team looks like and long before you have priced yourself into the market

— gabriel (@gabriel1) May 31, 2026

Recruiters have traditionally warned against job-hopping — or, relocating to new positions and companies every one to three years — because it can call a worker's commitment into question.

Petersson said he doesn't agree with that advice, suggesting that other young engineers instead take a fast approach to building their careers.

"Just tell people you are looking for internship or you want to 'try working together for a month' or say you're a contractor," he wrote, saying that hopping can result in "huge wins for everyone that all sides have information so you can price yourself in."

Petersson himself hopped around before landing an AI research position at OpenAI in 2024, when he was 23, according to his GitHub profile. Before that, he worked as a software engineer at Dataland and Midourney for less than two years each, according to his LinkedIn profile. He dropped out of high school in Sweden at 17 to focus on building AI start-ups.

He isn't the only tech personality to make the case for job-hopping. In April, when asked to grade some common career advice, Ryan Roslansky, LinkedIn's former CEO, gave job-hopping for more money an "A."

A tough job market raised the stakes for young workers

Still, the suggestions land at a tough moment for young workers, especially in tech. Tech companies, including Meta, Oracle, Microsoft, and Block, have announced major layoffs in recent months. Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a layoff-tracking firm, said that while fewer employers are cutting jobs overall this year, layoffs in the tech sector are up 40%.

Entry-level and engineering jobs have also been hit hard by AI, making the post-college job hunt harder for many young Americans — and raising the stakes for those who do land a role.

But Petersson said some of the best engineers he knows spent years at early jobs that, in hindsight, were not valuable stepping stones. He gave the example of an engineer spending "2.5 years at a startup" after college, making $80,000, before later landing a multimillion-dollar deal.

He said that some workers do strike it rich by joining the right company early. He wrote that a small number of people end up at a frontier AI lab or as early engineers at fast-growing startups, making life-changing money.

"These are extremely rare," he wrote. "Ask any great engineer and you'll realize how many years they wasted with bad companies."

Petersson and OpenAI did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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