Boomband, from Monster.com's founder, replaces resumes with multi-page dossiers blending career and personal identity – because the line no longer exists.
ENTRY ANGLES
AI-powered passive matching marketplace that surfaces candidates without active job search · Work-life integration platform connecting people to roles aligned with personal values · Next-generation marketplace using continuous AI profiling instead of resume submissions
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI profiling and matching algorithms, Passive data collection and integration, Marketplace platform infrastructure
BOOMBAND FOUNDER
“did this person do the relevant things before?”
Boomband set out to "reinvent recruiting" – how people find employers, and how companies find people.
That's not a claim unique to this startup. But there's a reason to take this one seriously: the founder is Jeff Taylor, who created Monster.com and led it for a decade, building one of the most enduring job platforms in the US.
User profiles on Boomband are called "dossiers" – and they look nothing like LinkedIn profiles, which is partly the point. They're organized into separate pages for career history, life, and skills.
The life page functions like a visual blog with photos and personal posts.
The skills page lists a wide range of capabilities categorized by proficiency level – from actively learning to recognized expertise.
Company profiles resemble richly illustrated Wikipedia entries, with leadership info, key facts, and a curated set of news stories pulled from across the web – all presented visually, with photos.
Each company profile includes a "work signals" section: a live digest of recent company developments and current open roles.
All profiles – for individuals and companies – are built and maintained by Boomband's AI, which continuously scrapes information from across the internet. Users and company representatives can verify their identities and edit or supplement what the AI has compiled.
The platform currently holds data on 18 million companies and 177 million people, each mapped to some subset of 96,000 skills. The AI has already generated 5.2 million work signal updates.
The central feature is the Arena. It's where companies search for candidates and candidates explore employers – and it works visually:
- When a person opens the Arena, they stand at the center. Companies they should consider appear at varying distances around them.
- When a company opens the Arena, they're at the center, with relevant candidate profiles arranged at varying distances.
Proximity in the Arena is calculated by the AI based on dossier content and recent signals. For example, the system might surface not simply someone with the right skills for a role – but someone who recently relocated to the same city where the position is based and who is actively developing those skills right now:
- That combination suggests they're looking for work out of genuine opportunity, not desperation.
- And the active skill development signals that they'll bring not just what they already know – but upward momentum.
Boomband is currently operating in invite-only early access. Despite the early stage, the company raised its first $4M a few days ago.
Boomband's founder, like many who have thought deeply about hiring, believes the traditional resume's time is up.
AI has accelerated the case. With companies using AI to screen resumes and candidates using AI to optimize resumes for the screening systems, the whole process has become a kind of SEO arms race where the document loses all signal value and becomes a marketing artifact.
But Boomband's more fundamental argument is about what companies actually need to know. Companies increasingly aren't asking "did this person do the relevant things before?" – they're asking "can this person do them now?" Several forces drive this:
- Many of the most valuable skills today didn't exist long enough to have long track records.
- The world keeps changing fast. Companies need people who can change with it.
What this means is that companies want *dynamic* information – not a static snapshot. And resume clichés like "fast learner" and "adaptable" provide exactly zero of it.
Boomband's AI builds dossiers around a 80/15/5 framework:
- 80% of focus on what the person is doing *right now* – updated continuously.
- 15% on where they say they want to go – stated ambitions, target roles, companies they're interested in.
- 5% on track record – demonstrated, verifiable achievements.
The goal is to capture *momentum* – the current vector of a person's trajectory, not their historical position.
Boomband applies the same logic to companies, since people with momentum want to join companies that are going somewhere. The real matching task is finding people and companies whose vectors currently point in compatible directions.
But "direction" can't be reduced to job-matching mechanics. So Boomband uses the framing of LifeWork – one word, intentionally blurring the line – and calls users "players" on an Arena. On the Arena, a player looks not just for an employer, but potentially for a team to join, a coach to help them level up, a scout (recruiter) who can fast-track them into the big leagues, and even supporters who follow their trajectory.
The Arena's core promise is that all of this happens without traditional search mechanics. You show up, and the system surfaces who you should probably be talking to – right now.
The old frame was "work-life balance" – a deliberate separation of the two spheres. Work happens here, from these hours; life happens everywhere else.
What's replacing it is "work-life integration" – a blurring, ideally in a direction where you work on things that matter to you personally, or at minimum where work and life can coexist in a self-directed flow rather than occupying separate compartments.
Boomband is explicitly trying to serve that shift – LifeWork as one word isn't incidental.
But beyond the conceptual angle, there's a structural point worth focusing on. Boomband is technically a marketplace connecting people and companies. The defining feature of first-generation marketplaces was search. But the defining feature of the next generation of marketplaces is *no search at all* – the platform proactively surfaces matches without the user having to hunt.
This came up [covered previously](/review/sdelaj-idealnyj-marketplejs-v-kotorom-ne-nuzhno-iskat) in a review of Jack & Jill, which raised $20M in its first round for a hiring platform where two AI agents – one representing the candidate, one representing the company – conduct conversations on each side and then the system proposes matches. No job listings, no resume submissions.
Boomband pushes further in the same direction by skipping the interview agents entirely and relying on passive data collection and continuous AI updates to build accurate enough profiles that meaningful matches can be generated without any active input from either side.
Two directions are worth pursuing here. The first is building labor market platforms around the work-life integration trend – tools that help people find work aligned with how they want to live, not just what they've done before. Find Your Grind ([related review](/review/novaja-koncepcija-obrazovanija)) is adjacent to this, raising $5M last fall for a career guidance platform that starts not with skills but with the question of how the student wants to live – then works backward to careers.
The second direction is the no-search marketplace model itself, applied across verticals beyond hiring. The opportunity is building platforms that figure out what each side actually needs and propose matches proactively – without browsing, without keyword queries, without either party having to articulate what they want. The technical and product challenges there are real, which is exactly why the window is still open.