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这家防务初创公司创始人坦言,正通过无人机飞行竞赛物色新锐人才

Preston Fore
2026-02-09

押注实干者,而非学历。

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安杜里尔(Anduril)创始人帕尔默·拉奇(Palmer Luckey)坦言,他喜欢录用不走寻常路的人才,如今,他正通过无人机飞行竞赛物色新锐人才。图片来源:Kyle Grillot—Bloomberg/Getty Images

当下,谋得一份高薪工作更像是闯关历险,而非攀登职业阶梯,对Z世代而言尤为如此。初级岗位的竞争异常激烈,而生成式人工智能让润色简历与打磨求职信变得前所未有的容易,这使得求职者仅凭书面材料脱颖而出的难度愈发加大。

估值3000亿美元的防务科技初创企业安杜里尔正以截然不同的方式开展招聘:别光说你有什么本事,用无人机飞给我们看。

该公司即将推出“人工智能大奖赛”(AI Grand Prix):这项面向全球顶尖工程师的公开赛事将于今年春季启动,选手将在高速无人机竞速赛中证明自身的编程能力。赛事的特别之处在于:无人机并非由人类操控,而是由选手开发的自主软件驾驶。本次竞赛对个人、高校团队及研究机构开放报名,无需任何专业资质或证书,唯一的前提是对人工智能编程怀有热忱。

排名前十的团队将瓜分50万美元奖金池,得分最高的参赛者更有望“斩获工作机会”,这意味着他们可以跳过安杜里尔的常规招聘流程,直接与招聘经理面谈空缺岗位。

“这是一场公开挑战赛,”这一创意的提出者、安杜里尔创始人帕尔默·拉奇在新闻稿中表示,“如果你认为自己能开发出超越全球顶尖水平的自主飞行系统,那就来一展身手。”

4月至6月将举办两轮线上资格赛,参赛团队需提交基于Python定制的人工智能算法,在模拟赛道上展开竞技。表现优异者将晋级今年9月在南加州举办的为期两周的线下集训与资格考核。最终,总决赛“人工智能大奖赛”将在俄亥俄州举办,决赛选手将角逐50万美元奖金,更有机会加入这家初创公司。

安杜里尔公司暂未回应《财富》杂志的置评请求。

帕尔默·拉奇押注实干者,而非学历

这位创始人凭借虚拟现实领域的早期探索在硅谷声名鹊起。拉奇创办的第一家公司Oculus于2014年被Meta以约20亿美元的价格收购。离开该公司后,拉奇于2017年创立安杜里尔,将其打造成一家专注于自主系统研发的大型防务科技企业,旨在为美军及其盟友提供支持。

如今安杜里尔的员工规模已增至7000人,拉奇表示,他不再青睐循规蹈矩的求职者,而是更青睐勇于探索新方向的人才。

“我在安杜里尔招聘时,会物色那些愿意主动开展本职工作与学校课程之外项目的人。”拉奇去年在《肖恩·瑞安秀》节目中称,“因为这类人愿意自掏腰包、牺牲个人时间钻研项目,只因他们想为世界创造出原本不存在的新事物。”

他给有志投身工程领域的年轻人的建议直截了当:不要坐等他人分配任务。“专注于你真正上心的项目。”他说道。

企业抢才玩法愈发创新

安杜里尔并非唯一一家重新思考顶尖人才筛选方式的企业。

越来越多初创公司摒弃传统招聘模式,转而采用基于技能挑战的考核方式来测试工程类求职者,形式从虚拟网络安全“夺旗赛”到数字寻宝游戏,不一而足。

科技巨头Palantir去年更进一步,推出“菁英奖学金项目”,为对大学教育持保留态度的高中应届毕业生提供为期四个月的带薪实习。该项目既安排实习生与全职员工共同参与技术工作,又开设美国历史与西方文明基础研讨会。表现优异者将获得公司全职岗位的面试机会。

这一举措也反映出首席执行官亚历克斯·卡普(Alex Karp)长期以来对高等教育的质疑态度。该奖学金项目被宣传为“获取Palantir学位、跳过助学贷款[和]......思想灌输”的途径。

卡普去年接受美国消费者新闻与商业频道(CNBC)采访时表示:“你在中小学和大学学习的关于世界运行逻辑的知识,在认知层面存在偏差。”

技能导向型招聘趋势正席卷各行各业。事实上,去年发布的一项调查显示,约90%的首席人力资源官表示,其所在企业对无四年制本科学历员工的招聘需求正持续攀升。

教育考试服务机构美国教育考试服务中心(ETS)全球首席营销与创新官米歇尔·弗罗(Michelle Froah)去年向《财富》杂志表示:“此举并非为了取代学历,而是让学历与可验证的实操技能形成平衡——实操技能既能让个人保持就业竞争力,也能让企业保持市场竞争力。”(财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

当下,谋得一份高薪工作更像是闯关历险,而非攀登职业阶梯,对Z世代而言尤为如此。初级岗位的竞争异常激烈,而生成式人工智能让润色简历与打磨求职信变得前所未有的容易,这使得求职者仅凭书面材料脱颖而出的难度愈发加大。

估值3000亿美元的防务科技初创企业安杜里尔正以截然不同的方式开展招聘:别光说你有什么本事,用无人机飞给我们看。

该公司即将推出“人工智能大奖赛”(AI Grand Prix):这项面向全球顶尖工程师的公开赛事将于今年春季启动,选手将在高速无人机竞速赛中证明自身的编程能力。赛事的特别之处在于:无人机并非由人类操控,而是由选手开发的自主软件驾驶。本次竞赛对个人、高校团队及研究机构开放报名,无需任何专业资质或证书,唯一的前提是对人工智能编程怀有热忱。

排名前十的团队将瓜分50万美元奖金池,得分最高的参赛者更有望“斩获工作机会”,这意味着他们可以跳过安杜里尔的常规招聘流程,直接与招聘经理面谈空缺岗位。

“这是一场公开挑战赛,”这一创意的提出者、安杜里尔创始人帕尔默·拉奇在新闻稿中表示,“如果你认为自己能开发出超越全球顶尖水平的自主飞行系统,那就来一展身手。”

4月至6月将举办两轮线上资格赛,参赛团队需提交基于Python定制的人工智能算法,在模拟赛道上展开竞技。表现优异者将晋级今年9月在南加州举办的为期两周的线下集训与资格考核。最终,总决赛“人工智能大奖赛”将在俄亥俄州举办,决赛选手将角逐50万美元奖金,更有机会加入这家初创公司。

安杜里尔公司暂未回应《财富》杂志的置评请求。

帕尔默·拉奇押注实干者,而非学历

这位创始人凭借虚拟现实领域的早期探索在硅谷声名鹊起。拉奇创办的第一家公司Oculus于2014年被Meta以约20亿美元的价格收购。离开该公司后,拉奇于2017年创立安杜里尔,将其打造成一家专注于自主系统研发的大型防务科技企业,旨在为美军及其盟友提供支持。

如今安杜里尔的员工规模已增至7000人,拉奇表示,他不再青睐循规蹈矩的求职者,而是更青睐勇于探索新方向的人才。

“我在安杜里尔招聘时,会物色那些愿意主动开展本职工作与学校课程之外项目的人。”拉奇去年在《肖恩·瑞安秀》节目中称,“因为这类人愿意自掏腰包、牺牲个人时间钻研项目,只因他们想为世界创造出原本不存在的新事物。”

他给有志投身工程领域的年轻人的建议直截了当:不要坐等他人分配任务。“专注于你真正上心的项目。”他说道。

企业抢才玩法愈发创新

安杜里尔并非唯一一家重新思考顶尖人才筛选方式的企业。

越来越多初创公司摒弃传统招聘模式,转而采用基于技能挑战的考核方式来测试工程类求职者,形式从虚拟网络安全“夺旗赛”到数字寻宝游戏,不一而足。

科技巨头Palantir去年更进一步,推出“菁英奖学金项目”,为对大学教育持保留态度的高中应届毕业生提供为期四个月的带薪实习。该项目既安排实习生与全职员工共同参与技术工作,又开设美国历史与西方文明基础研讨会。表现优异者将获得公司全职岗位的面试机会。

这一举措也反映出首席执行官亚历克斯·卡普(Alex Karp)长期以来对高等教育的质疑态度。该奖学金项目被宣传为“获取Palantir学位、跳过助学贷款[和]......思想灌输”的途径。

卡普去年接受美国消费者新闻与商业频道(CNBC)采访时表示:“你在中小学和大学学习的关于世界运行逻辑的知识,在认知层面存在偏差。”

技能导向型招聘趋势正席卷各行各业。事实上,去年发布的一项调查显示,约90%的首席人力资源官表示,其所在企业对无四年制本科学历员工的招聘需求正持续攀升。

教育考试服务机构美国教育考试服务中心(ETS)全球首席营销与创新官米歇尔·弗罗(Michelle Froah)去年向《财富》杂志表示:“此举并非为了取代学历,而是让学历与可验证的实操技能形成平衡——实操技能既能让个人保持就业竞争力,也能让企业保持市场竞争力。”(财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

Landing a high-paying job right now can feel less like climbing a ladder and more like surviving a gauntlet—especially for Gen Z. Competition for entry-level roles is fierce, and generative AI has made it easier than ever to polish résumés and cover letters, making it harder for candidates to stand out on paper alone.

Anduril, a $30 billion defense tech startup, is approaching hiring with a radically different approach: Don’t tell us what you can do—fly it.

The company is launching an “AI Grand Prix”—an open-invitation event starting this spring for the world’s top engineers to prove their coding skills in a high-speed drone racing competition. The twist: Humans won’t be piloting, but their autonomous software will be. The competition is open to individuals, university teams, and research organizations. No professional credentials or certifications are required. The only prerequisite? A passion for AI programming.

The top 10 teams will split a $500,000 prize pool, while the highest-scoring participant could “win a job”—meaning they can skip Anduril’s usual recruiting process to interview directly with hiring managers for open roles.

“This is an open challenge,” Anduril founder Palmer Luckey, who conceived the idea, said in a press release. “If you think you can build an autonomy stack that can out-fly the world’s best, show us.”

The competition will begin with two virtual qualification phases between April and June, when teams submit custom Python-based AI algorithms and compete on a simulated racecourse. Top performers will advance to a two-week, in-person training and qualification program in Southern California this September. The series will culminate with the “AI Grand Prix” in Ohio, where finalists will race for the $500,000 prize pool—and a potential job at the startup.

Anduril didn’t immediately respond to Fortune’s request for comment.

Anduril’s Palmer Luckey bets on builders—not on degrees

The company’s founder is best known in Silicon Valley for his early work in virtual reality. Luckey’s first company, Oculus, was acquired by Meta in 2014 for about $2 billion. After departing the company, Luckey founded Anduril in 2017, building it into a major defense technology firm focused on autonomous systems designed to support U.S. forces and its allies.

But as Anduril has ballooned to 7,000 employees, Luckey has said he looks less for candidates who have walked the beaten path—and instead seeks those who are willing to try something new.

“When I hire people at Anduril, I look for people who have done projects that were outside of what their work paid them to do or what their school made them do,” Luckey said on the Shawn Ryan Show last year. “Because that means they’re the type of person who is willing to work on things with their own money and their own time because they want to bring something to this world that wouldn’t have existed otherwise.”

His advice to aspiring engineers is straightforward: Don’t wait for someone to tell you what to do. “Work on projects that you care about,” he said.

Employers are getting more creative in seeking top talent

Anduril is not alone in rethinking how to identify top performers.

A growing number of startups are bucking tradition and turning to skills-based challenges as an alternative way to test engineering candidates—from virtual “capture the flag” cybersecurity competitions to digital scavenger hunts.

Tech giant Palantir took the idea even further last year with its Meritocracy Fellowship, a four-month paid internship for recent high school graduates who have mixed feelings about the university experience. The program combines technical work alongside full-time employees with seminars on U.S. history and the foundations of Western civilization. Participants who excel are given the opportunity to interview for full-time roles at the company.

The initiative also reflects CEO Alex Karp’s long-standing disdain for higher education. The fellowship was marketed as a way to “get the Palantir degree” and “skip the debt [and] … indoctrination.”

“Everything you learned at your school and college about how the world works is intellectually incorrect,” Karp told CNBC last year.

The broader shift toward skills-based hiring has been spreading across industries. In fact, about 90% of chief human resources officers say their organizations have an increasing need to hire workers without a four-year degree, according to a survey released last year.

“This is not about replacing degrees,” Michelle Froah, global chief marketing and innovation officer at educational testing company ETS, told Fortune last year. “It’s about balancing them with real, demonstrable skills that keep people employable and businesses competitive.”

财富中文网所刊载内容之知识产权为财富媒体知识产权有限公司及/或相关权利人专属所有或持有。未经许可,禁止进行转载、摘编、复制及建立镜像等任何使用。
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