About
We built Verif because resumes are broken.
In 2024, every bootcamp graduate has a GitHub portfolio. Most of those portfolios contain AI-generated code that the candidate doesn't fully understand. Hiring managers know this. Recruiters know this. And yet the industry keeps pretending that a link to a GitHub repo is meaningful signal.
The result is a broken market on both sides. Bootcamp grads who did the work — who genuinely learned to code — can't differentiate themselves from people who gpt-4'd their way through a 12-week program. And companies waste engineering time on phone screens that could have been automated.
We started Verif with a simple premise: if you can actually code, you should be able to prove it in under two minutes. Not with a whiteboard problem. Not with a four-hour take-home. With a real task — write the code, submit it, watch the tests run in real-time, get a verified score.
How we're different
Every submission to Verif runs in a fresh, isolated e2b sandbox — a clean VM that spins up, runs your code, and shuts down. There's no way to game it. The tests either pass or they don't. The score is derived from objective output, not a human judgment call.
Scores are timestamped and permanently associated with your profile. They can't be edited. They can't be deleted. When a hiring manager sees "100% · 12/12 tests · TypeScript · verified Jun 29, 2026," they're looking at ground truth — not a self-reported skill.
For bootcamps, this means replacing subjective capstone reviews with a consistent, automated assessment that runs in two minutes per student. For graduates, it means a shareable credential URL that stands on its own.
The team
Built by developers who got tired of the broken hiring process. We've been on both sides of the table — writing take-homes that didn't predict job performance, and sitting through interviews that had nothing to do with actual work. Verif is our attempt to fix that.
The mission
Give every bootcamp graduate a credential that employers can actually trust. Not a certificate that says you completed a course. A verified score that says you can write code that works.