Byron Slosar, founder of HelloHive

Hellohive is tackling hiring discrimination as more equitable hiring companies emerge

Byron Slosar, founder of HelloHive

Image Credits: Byron Slosar

Resume and recruitment platform Hellohive seeks to help eliminate hiring bias by creating a virtual community that includes employers and those looking for a new role.

The company is part of an increasing number of resume and skill apps that are trying to combat discrimination in the hiring process. Hellohive gives candidates from underrepresented or socially marginalized backgrounds the opportunities to connect with employers they might have otherwise not had a chance to meet. It also gives employers the opportunity to look at candidates for skills beyond where they went to school or where they once worked, allowing for a more holistic approach to hiring that can in turn diversify a workforce.

Hellohive hosts virtual networking programs between companies and candidates on the app, with clients including Goldman Sachs, American Express and Morgan Stanley. The company announced on Thursday a $3.4 million Series A round, led by the Tisch Family, to help it achieve its mission.

Byron Slosar, who founded the company in 2019, said he created the app after a decade in undergraduate career services and recruiting. “I saw an opportunity for technology to employ candidates from all diverse backgrounds and experiences with an equitable opportunity to find success,” he told TechCrunch, adding that career success shouldn’t be defined by who you know or where you go to school. “We are committed to providing the same shot at success for anyone who’s willing to put in the work.”

Product imagery of HelloHive
Example of what a candidate’s profile looks like on the Hellohive app. Image Credits: Hellohive

He called fundraising “always challenging” but took the opportunity to meet new people and form new connections.

Hellohive’s holistic approach to hiring is important right now especially, as companies have been shifting away from DEI commitments.

The app offers coaching services to job candidates on formatting a resume that will attract employers to the platform. Candidates also complete a course model that prepares them for the job recruitment process. They then express interest in an employer on the app, and the hiring process formally kicks off.

“Hive’s technology unlocks a unique level of connectivity and understanding among all participants in the recruitment conversation and not only modernizes but humanizes the recruitment process for all involved,” said Dan Levine, who works with Tom Tisch at his family office.

The Pearl Fund and angel investors Ann Tenenbaum, Jeff Altman and Robert Bell Wilkins also participated in the round.

Slosar said this latest round of funding will be used to expand the executive team, enhance Hellohive’s current technology, and reach new potential clients. The company has raised $9 million to date in funding.

“I’m excited to see the impact that an all-inclusive, ever-evolving and self-identified approach to diversity will have on the world,” Slosar said.

Buffet app displayed on mobile phone screens

Exclusive: Buffet is tackling the loneliness epidemic by connecting people in the real world

Buffet app displayed on mobile phone screens

Image Credits: Buffet

If you’ve been feeling lonely over the past few years, you’re not alone. According to a 2023 report from the U.S. surgeon general, about half of U.S. adults reported feeling lonely, even before the COVID-19 pandemic. The report warns that loneliness and isolation can lead to physical consequences, such as a 29% increased risk of heart disease and a 32% increased risk of stroke.

A new app called Buffet is aiming to address the loneliness epidemic by helping users meet new people by quickly matching them with a person and a place to meet up (think Tinder + OpenTable). The app is designed to remove the barriers and hassles that come with meeting new people and then trying to find a place to hang out. Buffet aims to help users meet likeminded individuals, whether they’re looking for a new friend, romantic partner or gym buddy.

At launch, Buffet is available in Los Angeles, with expansions planned for additional cities later this year, starting with New York City.

The app is the brainchild of Buffet CEO Rich Hacking and COO Sean Emery. The pair worked as financial analysts before starting Buffet and came up with the idea for the app while they were on a business trip in Dubai.

“We started throwing this idea around, and thought, hey, there’s something there,” Hacking told TechCrunch. “We saw the loneliness epidemic and saw that the market was in need of something new. The massive incumbents have lacked innovation in the last decade. There was an obvious key opportunity for disruption. So we put one foot in front of the other and started building Buffet.”

To get started with Buffet, users enter five of their interests, such as motorcycles, horseback riding or reading. The app then asks a series of five questions to get a better understanding of their personality and what kinds of places and people they would be interested in.

Image Credits: Buffet

Buffet’s algorithm then pairs users. If interested, they can send an invite to the person they’re matched with; the matched pair can then message each other via the app to decide on a time and date to meet. Buffet is designed to allow people to do most of the talking and getting-to-know-each-other in-person. Buffet encourages people to go beyond a chatbox and digital communication and actually meet up in the real world.

If there’s a match with someone, but the app-suggested meeting place isn’t a good match, users can choose from a list of other places that might be more interesting. And if users aren’t interested in their match partners, they can refresh and get matched with someone else.

Buffet’s target demographic is people who have been affected by the loneliness epidemic the most: 18- to 25-year-olds. The app also wants to target young professionals in the late to early 30s. Hacking believes that if Buffet can win over the average 25-year-old female professional, it can win over anyone.

“The app will be free to use for the foreseeable future,” Hacking said. “We want to win over users. We want to build trust and right now, when you read the market, people are frustrated with all of the paywalls.”

In terms of the app’s business model, Buffet will leverage advertising. The company plans to build up an in-app community forum where local businesses would be able to advertise directly to users and promote happy hours and other discounts.

The app is currently only available on iOS, but the company plans to launch an Android app in the future.