If you want to know just how intense the competition for AI talent has become, consider this: OpenAI is now eliminating vesting cliffs entirely for new employees. No waiting period. No cliff. Your equity starts vesting from day one.
Making It Easier to Jump Ship
According to a Wall Street Journal report, OpenAI's applications chief Fidji Simo announced the policy change, which aims to encourage new hires to take risks without worrying they'll get fired before their equity vests. The message is clear: we want you comfortable enough to innovate, not constantly looking over your shoulder.
This isn't OpenAI's first rodeo with vesting changes either. Back in April, the company already cut its vesting period from the typical industry standard of 12 months down to six months. Now they're going even further, ditching the cliff concept altogether.
The War for AI Brains
The moves reflect just how cutthroat the battle for top-tier technical talent has become in the AI sector. Companies like Meta Platforms Inc. (META), Alphabet Inc.'s (GOOG) (GOOGL) Google, and Anthropic are throwing lucrative pay packages at skilled researchers and engineers.
Earlier this month, OpenAI's chief research officer Mark Chen shared a telling anecdote: Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg personally made homemade soup for talent he wanted to recruit for his company's AI efforts. When billionaire CEOs are cooking soup to woo engineers, you know the talent market is overheated.
The Price Tag for Talent
Here's where things get eye-popping: OpenAI is projected to spend $6 billion this year on stock-based compensation alone. That's nearly half of the company's expected revenue. Think about that for a moment. For every dollar OpenAI brings in, roughly 50 cents goes straight to employee equity.
OpenAI isn't alone in adjusting its approach. Elon Musk's xAI also shortened its vesting period earlier this year to attract more recruits in what everyone agrees is a brutally competitive hiring environment.
Sweetening the Deal Further
The vesting changes are just part of OpenAI's broader talent retention strategy. Employees recently considered selling $6 billion worth of shares to investors like SoftBank Group Corp. (SFTBY) and Thrive Capital, a move that could boost the company's valuation to a staggering $500 billion.
On top of that, OpenAI announced a $1.5 million bonus for all employees, including new hires, distributed over two years. Industry watchers see this as a direct response to what's been dubbed the "Zuck Poaching Effect," as Meta Platforms and other tech giants aggressively hunt for top talent.
Meanwhile, OpenAI continues pushing forward on other fronts. The company is working on a new device prototype that CEO Sam Altman describes as "simple, beautiful, and playful," underscoring OpenAI's commitment to innovation and maintaining its leadership position in the AI field.
When you're spending half your revenue on stock compensation and CEOs are making soup to recruit your employees, you know the stakes are high. OpenAI's latest vesting changes are just another move in what's become the most expensive talent war in tech.




