Elite colleges regain hiring edge as firms cut recruiting

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — United States employers are sharply narrowing their entry-level recruitment to a shortlist of elite and local universities, reversing a post-pandemic trend of broader hiring.
This shift sees firms prioritizing on-campus engagement at select schools amid a flood of AI-generated resumes and a receding tide of diversity initiatives.
The move restores a competitive advantage to prestigious institutions even as public skepticism about the value of a college degree grows.
Companies slash college recruiting to elite schools only
The Wall Street Journal reports that a 2025 survey of over 150 companies by recruiting intelligence firm Veris Insights found that 26% were now recruiting exclusively from a shortlist of schools, a significant increase from 17% in 2022.
Nearly all other surveyed firms reported using a mixed model, focusing on “target schools” while accepting online applications from others, a practice that inherently prioritizes candidates from prestigious or geographically convenient universities.
Chelsea Schein, Veris Insights’ Vice President of Research Strategy, told Fortune that employers are “increasingly turning to degree and GPA in a hiring decision.”
This contraction marks a return to pre-pandemic recruitment patterns, with most firms now actively recruiting from only about 30 of the nation’s 4,000 universities.
Fortune notes that major corporations exemplify this trend: GE Appliances has reduced its outreach from 45 to 50 schools to just 15 core institutions, while financial technology firm Bill concentrates on colleges near its San Jose, California; Utah; and Draper offices.
Meanwhile, the consulting firm McKinsey is now “recommitting to a high-touch process” at a shortlist of about 20 universities.
AI resume flood forces return to prestige hiring
Recruiters cite several practical reasons for this strategic retreat from the nationwide “talent is everywhere” hiring approach. The costs of cross-country travel and on-campus events are major factors, so localized recruitment is more cost-effective.
Moreover, the use of AI-generated resumes has produced a homogeneous pool of applicants, as companies are moving to use university pedigree as a major differentiator to reduce the thousands of applications that are virtually identical, thereby creating a more efficient culling process.
Simultaneously, companies have substantially deprioritized diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, which previously supported broader recruitment. According to the Veris survey, in 2025, only 31% of employers will attach importance to diversity in school selection, compared to almost 60% in 2022.
This underprioritization, along with a corporate emphasis on in-person work, has led companies to seek candidates who are less likely to move to a new job, such as local graduates, thereby creating a compounded disadvantage for students with weaker connections or not in the core or regional network.
College value doubted as elite degrees dominate market
According to Fortune, this recruiting trend occurs amid increased societal skepticism about the value of higher education, with just 35% of adults in the United States in 2025 indicating that a college education is very important, compared to 70% in 2013.
Almost half of Millennials and Gen Z think college wasn’t worth the money. Recruiters such as Randstad Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Sander van ’t Noordende told Fortune that people must “reflect on—taking a student loan, going to college and being trained or educated for a profession that is rapidly changing—whether that’s still the right path.”
Even the college wage premium has plateaued at roughly 90%, according to the Federal Reserve of Cleveland, after decades of growth.
Despite this doubt, the number of people earning a bachelor’s degree increased to 2.2 million in 2025, up from 1.6 million in 2010. The current trend in hiring, however, reveals a clear gap in results and proves that not every degree has equal value.
As Schein notes, while she would rather have a degree than not, the reality is that for top recruiters, a bachelor’s degree alone is insufficient unless it originates from an elite or strategically local institution.
This strategic retreat to pedigree-based hiring solidifies a two-tiered labor market, where the future of the workplace is not just about what you know, but about where—and increasingly whether—you learned it.

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