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Computer Science Grads Have a New Dream Job — And It’s Not Working for Meta, Apple or Google

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Why This Matters

The shift of computer science graduates towards founding their own startups signifies a major change in career aspirations within the tech industry. This trend reflects broader economic and technological factors, such as the slowdown in traditional hiring and the rise of AI tools that lower startup costs, empowering new entrepreneurs. For consumers and the industry, this could lead to increased innovation and a diversification of tech solutions emerging from fresh, independent ventures.

Key Takeaways

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Key Takeaways A growing number of recent college graduates are taking a risk and starting their own companies instead of joining an established Big Tech firm.

A new report from venture firm SignalFire analyzed the LinkedIn profiles of more than 10,000 Bachelor’s degree recipients each year.

The report found that the percentage of computer science graduates who identified as founders doubled from 2022 to 2025.

For years, the default job goal for computer science majors in college was a high-paying role at Google, Meta or another tech giant. Now, a growing number of graduates are reorienting their ambitions. Instead of working for FAANG (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google) after college, they are taking a risk and starting their own companies.

Several forces are converging to make “founder” the new dream job on campus. First, the traditional pipeline from a computer science degree to a big-tech job has weakened. Hiring has slowed down, and automated tools have reduced the need for large junior engineering teams.

The Wall Street Journal recently reported that for many graduates, starting a new venture feels like the rational choice when confronted with months of unanswered applications or rescinded offers.

Additionally, AI tools have lowered the cost of shipping a minimum viable product, allowing small teams to create products that once required entire departments. In this environment, the founder path looks less like an outlier and more like a competitive option for ambitious computer science graduates who want to take control of their careers.

One recent graduate, Tejas Prabhune, graduated last month from the University of California, Berkeley, with a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and computer science. He told the Journal that he chose to bet on himself and start a new machine learning startup instead of working at a startup or a big AI company.

“You get agency, you get speed, you get to work closely with the people you like,” Prabhune told the Journal about the positives of entrepreneurship. “I believe I’ve made a difficult, somewhat irrational decision, and regardless of the difficulty, we’ll keep our heads down and focus on building our company.”

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