For years, the gold standard for computer science majors was a secure position at Google, Meta, or Apple. That ambition is shifting as hiring pipelines tighten and junior-level roles evaporate. A "junior lockout" has gripped the industry, with entry-level hiring at early-stage companies plummeting to just 3% in 2025, down from 15% a decade ago. Faced with months of unanswered applications, many graduates now view launching their own venture as a more rational career move than waiting for an offer that may never come.
Technological shifts have further fueled this trend. AI tools now allow small, nimble teams to build products that previously required entire departments, lowering the barriers to entry for new founders. Recent UC Berkeley graduate Tejas Prabhune is among those choosing to bet on himself rather than join an established firm, citing the agency and speed of entrepreneurship as primary motivators. According to SignalFire, the share of CS graduates starting companies reached 6% in 2025, with Stanford University leading the pack at nearly 17%. As big tech companies reduce their reliance on large junior engineering teams, investors like Jeremy Fiance of House Fund are increasingly signaling a willingness to back these young entrepreneurs, effectively replacing the traditional corporate ladder with a venture-backed alternative.
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