Artificial intelligence is creating more tech jobs than it destroys, but it is hollowing out the entry-level, forcing a seismic shift in hiring toward more experienced and expensive talent. IT and computer-science job postings jumped 14.2% year-over-year in April 2026, yet companies are increasingly seeking senior engineers who can effectively manage AI agents and maintain code quality.
"One experienced engineer can have the output of a whole team," says Chris Abbass, chief executive of recruiting firm Talentful. "It’s not necessarily about the amount of people they have, it’s who they have and where they have them.”
The industry-wide pivot to AI is creating a stark divide in the labor market. The share of entry-level job postings in the tech sector fell to 7.4% in April from 8.1% a year prior, according to data from online employment marketplace ZipRecruiter. The share of senior-level postings, meanwhile, rose to 43.1% from 38.8%. This comes as firms like Cloudflare, Meta, and Block’s payments unit have cut staff as part of AI-driven restructuring.
For investors, this trend suggests a dual impact: higher near-term payroll costs as companies compete for a limited pool of expensive senior AI talent, but a potential long-term productivity boom if these new teams can successfully implement AI. The shift, however, threatens to create a bottleneck in the future talent pipeline, as fewer entry-level positions could lead to a shortage of experienced engineers down the line.
New Roles, New Skills
The demand for new types of technical roles is growing rapidly as companies grapple with the complexities of deploying AI at scale. "You can be sure that every bank, every pharmaceutical company, every healthcare company, every manufacturer is going to be hiring a ton of people to go implement agents,” said Aaron Levie, CEO of the cloud-services provider Box. He noted a rising need for roles that can wire up AI systems throughout a company’s infrastructure, blending technical skills with business process knowledge.
This focus on implementation is also changing the skills required for top tech jobs. As AI automates more routine coding tasks, companies are placing a higher premium on soft skills like communication and collaboration. “As AI handles background tasks, the core functions of these technology roles are becoming more interpersonal and human-focused,” said Nicole Bachaud, a labor economist at ZipRecruiter.
However, engineers without specific AI skills face a tough market, regardless of their years of experience. “The few people that are being hired are people that have done something in AI before and have a proven track record,” said Victor Janulaitis, CEO of IT employment consulting firm Janco Associates. He noted that many unemployed tech workers "tend to be legacy individuals or people getting close to retirement age."
Not all companies are abandoning junior talent. Amazon Web Services plans to hire 11,000 software-engineering interns and early-career employees in 2026, a figure consistent with previous years, according to an AWS vice president. This suggests some of the largest players, including Nvidia and Intel who are driving the AI hardware boom, will continue to invest in building their future workforce from the ground up.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.