Artificial intelligence startup xAI is undergoing a major reset after problems in its early hiring process, Elon Musk said.
“Many talented people over the past few years were declined an offer or even an interview at xAI. My apologies,” Musk wrote on X last week. “Baris Akis and I are going through the company interview history and reaching back out to promising candidates.”
Akis, a talent strategist who has recruited engineers across several of Musk’s companies, is helping lead the hiring review. Several members of the original team at xAI have already left as the company restructures and reassesses its hiring process.
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Musk’s comments highlight how aggressively AI companies are competing for talent. Engineers and researchers with experience building large AI systems remain in short supply as companies race to develop new models and infrastructure.
Revisiting past hiring decisions may help the company recover candidates who were overlooked during the startup’s early recruiting push.
Correcting those mistakes may be critical as competition intensifies across the AI industry. Companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Google DeepMind are aggressively recruiting top engineers, often by offering multimillion-dollar compensation packages to secure experienced researchers.
As companies race to refine their AI capabilities, startups like Rad AI are focused on using data-driven intelligence to help organizations create more effective, measurable content — highlighting how competition in the space is pushing both hiring and product development to evolve quickly.
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The restructuring appears to extend beyond hiring. Musk last week suggested the company is undergoing a deeper rebuild, writing that “xAI was not built right first time around, so is being rebuilt from the foundations up. Same thing happened with Tesla.”
Former xAI engineer Sulaiman Ghori has said the company is overhauling parts of its technical infrastructure. “The company is rebuilding its core production APIs,” he said on “The Relentless” podcast in January, adding that “xAI is working far ahead.”
The talent review coincides with strategic hires that signal xAI’s push to accelerate product development. In recent weeks, the company hired Andrew Milich and Jason Ginsberg, former product engineering leaders from the AI coding startup Cursor. These additions bolster xAI’s efforts to build competitive AI coding tools after Musk complained that the company’s offerings were not effectively competing with rivals such as Anthropic’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex, according to TechCrunch.