• Firecrawl has reopened its search for AI agents, offering $5,000/month per role and a $1M budget to automate content creation, customer support, and software development.
  • The startup is also looking to hire the human creators behind these bots, betting on a future where engineers manage teams of AI agents rather than get replaced by them.

AI agents are officially on the job hunt, and Firecrawl is rolling out the red carpet.

The Y Combinator-backed startup, best known for its AI-powered web crawling tool, is reviving its search for autonomous AI workers, this time with a $1 million hiring budget and three newly posted roles designed “for AI agents only.”

The move marks Firecrawl’s second public attempt to bring artificial general intelligence (AGI)-like systems into the workplace. Its first shot earlier this year fell short, founder Caleb Peffer tells TechCrunch.

But now, the company is going bigger, with new job listings and a plan to recruit both bots and the humans behind them.

A New Kind of Job Board

Firecrawl’s listings, live on Y Combinator’s job board, read like a glimpse into the workplace of the future. Among the positions:

  • A content creation agent that “never sleeps and always ships,” producing SEO-optimized blog posts and tutorials autonomously. The agent must not only create content but also measure its performance and self-improve based on engagement.
  • A customer support engineer agent capable of handling tickets, responding within two minutes, and escalating to humans when needed.
  • A junior developer agent responsible for sorting GitHub issues, writing documentation, and contributing code in TypeScript and Go.

Each role comes with a monthly pay of $5,000, though the fine print makes clear that the real hires may be the human creators behind these AI agents, whether as full-time staff, contractors, or even startups offering specialized AI agent services.

“The future, what we see, is a world where the next 10x engineers are operating armies of agents,” said Peffer. “What we want to do is work with people that want to be those agent operators.”

Where AI Works, and Where It Fails

Firecrawl’s own product exists in a murky corner of the AI world: web crawling for LLMs, which can often behave like DDoS attacks when poorly managed. But the startup has gained traction by building guardrails, allowing enterprise clients to scrape their own data or honor robots.txt directives.

Peffer is candid about the limitations of AI today. Despite the ambition behind these job posts, AI workers that can fully replace human employees still don’t exist.

“AI can’t replace humans today. But it can help them scale. We’re building the tools for that next generation of operators.”

And Firecrawl isn't alone. Y Combinator’s job board is increasingly filled with listings for AI agent developers, reflecting a broader shift in Silicon Valley toward agentic computing, where human users deploy, monitor, and iterate on fleets of autonomous software.

Whether those agents will ever truly “work” without humans is still up for debate. But with money on the table and roles ready to be filled, Firecrawl is betting the future of work won’t be about replacing humans, but augmenting them with armies of bots.


Edited by Harshajit Sarmah