OpenAI Builds LinkedIn Rival for AI Era

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Founded in 2002 and bought by Microsoft in 2016 for over $26 billion, LinkedIn is the number one platform worldwide for jobs, networking, and showcasing professional skills, with over a billion users.

However, the job market has been shifting since 2022, as more firms are adopting AI tools. So OpenAI, known for ChatGPT, decided to roll out a new job‑search platform designed specifically for this evolving landscape.

This AI‑focused job platform is expected to be launched around mid‑2026. The service will directly challenge LinkedIn, offering users certifications and courses and providing a direct connection between candidates and companies.

It could be a welcome helping hand for workers who have already lost jobs and those likely to be replaced by AI soon, since AI has caused many layoffs in several domains.

Since generative AI emerged, big firms such as Klarna and Duolingo have been automating their workforces. A report cited by Forbes suggests young adults, aged twenty‑two to twenty‑five, could lose about 13% of their jobs in AI‑heavy fields.

OpenAI wants to step in, offering retraining programs and creating a space where skills are more valued than diplomas as hiring standards.

Microsoft has not reacted yet, but it may revamp LinkedIn accordingly. Then, we could witness a clash between the two giants — a competition that could benefit both users and Nvidia stock price.

The platform will offer a “frictionless” experience:

Training modules built into ChatGPT, called Study Mode
An “AI Fluency” badge that could certify what the user learned
Linking directly to Walmart, Accenture, John Deere, and state organizations

LinkedIn showcases job openings. Meanwhile, OpenAI plans to root itself in regions, becoming a tool for local growth rather than just a networking website. It could also influence tech learning in local schools.

​LinkedIn already boasts over a billion members. OpenAI however, represents something different when it promotes a platform where AI reads a CV and helps train and certify skills.

While LinkedIn leans on networking and increasing visibility, OpenAI focuses on a direct pathway from learning to getting hired. That could attract users who need employment quickly, even though it also raises doubts. Will enough employers adopt this new model, or will they stick to the habits they have relied on for years? The answer is still unknown.

Betting on a skills‑focused platform, OpenAI wants to be more than just a LinkedIn‑type professional network. The plan relies on AI directly assessing what people can actually do, and on deals with strategic partners.