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Burned Out And Pushed Aside: Instability Is Forcing Tech's Best Out The Door
Burnout and job insecurity are increasingly shaping how tech professionals move through the workforce, translating directly into higher churn and shifting career behavior. As workloads intensify and advancement opportunities slow, many employees—particularly those in the middle of their careers—are reassessing their trajectory. Retention challenges are becoming more concentrated in environments where heavy workloads, uncertainty and weak leadership converge, creating conditions that push employees to look elsewhere. Wendy Lee Berger, global lead of client services and operations at Impact, says two groups are most likely to leave: early-career professionals, who can move before building significant tenure, and mid-career employees with portable skills who can pivot when growth stalls. “The second group are mid-career employees, who have invested years at an organization, but have the talent and portable skillsets to easily pivot into a new organization,” she says. These mid-career move
How to Build Career Momentum When Budget Isn’t the Real Problem
Rising IT budgets are not translating into faster execution, as many teams continue to struggle with limited capacity, fragmented workflows and growing tool sprawl. Instead of accelerating outcomes, additional investment is often adding complexity—layering new tools and projects onto already strained environments. That disconnect is shifting the focus from how much organizations spend to how effectively teams execute. The IT groups making progress are not necessarily those with the largest budgets, but those that can streamline workflows, reduce redundancy and clearly tie their work to business outcomes. As pressure builds to demonstrate return on investment, execution discipline—not funding—is becoming the defining factor in performance and career growth. Dr. Gina Smith, IDC research director of IT skills for digital business, explains one of the biggest IT team breakdowns she sees is when teams add tools and projects faster than they add the right owners, workflows and success metric
AI Literacy Skills Tech Professionals Need
Future tech professionals are leaving school with knowledge of how to generate quick outputs using AI, but they lack other important skills such as prompt engineering, bias detection, and responsible AI. Using AI today requires AI literacy, which education nonprofit Digital Promise defines as “the knowledge and skills that enable humans to critically understand, evaluate, and use AI systems and tools to safely and ethically participate in an increasingly digital world.” Richie Cotton, senior data evangelist at online learning platform DataCamp, considers AI literacy to be like a driver’s license for AI. “Most people don't need to understand the details of how an engine works, but they do need to know how to drive a car safely on the road,” Cotton says. A worker would need to be able to have a conversation about AI and understand it just well enough to carry on an intelligent conversation, he says. Close to 9 in 10 leaders rated basic data literacy skills as important or very important
Hiring Friction Is Undermining Confidence Across the Tech Workforce
Even as job search activity rises, the mechanics of hiring—ghost jobs, mismatched roles and slow processes—are eroding trust in the system. Professionals are applying more broadly, often below their skill level, just to secure employment. This friction is reinforcing pessimism and suppressing confidence. A lot of the friction in tech hiring today stems from how quickly the tech landscape has evolved and scaled. Applicants are leveraging AI and other new tools in their job search, leaving companies to manage a higher volume of applicants than ever before. In addition, AI-driven workflows and integration of AI into the workplace have shifted role requirements. This has created gaps between how roles are defined, how candidates are evaluated, and how hiring decisions are made. Skills Scarcity, Outdated Hiring Workflows Abhinav Shrivastava, IDC research manager, talent acquisition and strategy, explains the current hiring friction in tech primarily originates from the conundrum of skills s
Cloud Computing Growth Drives Need for Cyber Talent
While artificial intelligence (AI) garners outsized attention of late, organizations of all sizes continue investing in a wide range of cloud computing services and technologies to build out their infrastructure and support numerous initiatives. For example, recent Gartner research finds that spending on sovereign cloud infrastructure as a service (IaaS) – virtualized computing, storage and networking resources that are physically and legally bound within a specific country or territorial jurisdiction – is expected to reach $80 billion in 2026 as businesses and government agencies seek out alternative services and providers during a time of increasing geopolitical uncertainty. Sovereign cloud IaaS is merely one area of the cloud computing business that continues to grow. These cloud technologies must also be secured from various cyber threats. Businesses and government agencies often struggle to ensure visibility, detection and response to attacks and breaches that can target cloud app