Contact Us
Questions, comments, ideas for future content? Contact us below.
The question I get from damn near everyone this year: “Who’s hiring right now?”
The flip, off-the-top-of-my-head answer has been “well, everyone except Big Tech. And SaaS.”
But that’s not really true. Or useful.
I pulled some data. At Hirewell, we’ve always prided ourselves on having as diversified a client base as possible. (The #1 biggest lesson we learned from the 2008-2009 debacle.) Focusing in just 1 sector is an excellent way to go out of business.
We have 115 clients currently hiring. Meaning open jobs, right now.
I carved them up by industries and noted the ones with the highest percentages:
Financial Services & Banking 17.70%
Real Estate & Construction 15.90%
Software/SaaS 10.60%
Manufacturing 9.70%
IT & Technology Consulting 6.20%
Marketing & Advertising 6.20%
Business Consulting 5.30%
Ecommerce & Retail 5.30%
Hospitals & Health Care 3.50%
E-Learning & Education 2.70%
Logistics & Supply Chain 2.70%
Insurance 1.90%
Health & Wellness 1.80%
Legal Services 1.80%
Airlines and Aviation 0.90%
Environmental Services 0.90%
Facilities Services 0.90%
Food & Beverage 0.90%
Hospitality 0.90%
Internet Publishing 0.90%
Mining 0.90%
Music 0.90%
Utilities 0.90%
Venture Capital and Private Equity (internally) 0.90%
What sticks out?
👉The establishment is strong. Financial services, banking, real estate. Traditional ‘money’ industries are thriving right now and gobbling up talent.
👉Software & SaaS isn’t totally dead. For context, in 2018-2022, this was in the 30% range of our clients. Falling to 10% is a pretty big drop. But even in the worst of times, tech isn’t going anywhere.
👉Consulting & agencies need people. Not a shock as that’s part of the recovery cycle: make cuts, then outsourced the critical bits to consultants. IT, marketing, and business consulting are doing well.
👉We ‘officially’ entered the manufacturing & supply chain areas in the last couple of years and it’s already one of the largest industry segments for us.
Two things to note:
1. This is just our data, which is inherently skew based on our own focus. It’s not indicative of the overall market.
2. Companies come to us when hiring is urgent, difficult, or in high volume. But not for every hire.
The takeaways?
👉If you’re looking for a new job, there’s some industries out there you may not have thought of that need people.
👉If you need to hire, we have a lot of experience in a lot of industry sectors…hit me up…
Partner at Hirewell. #3 Ranked Sarcastic Commenter on LinkedIn.
If you’re hiring in 2026, you’re dealing with two realities at the same time.
First, traditional signals like degrees and pedigree are losing their value.
Second, Gen Z is reshaping expectations around speed, transparency, and trust.
Together, those forces are pushing talent acquisition into its next evolution.
As we outlined in Agentic HR Is Here: What Talent Acquisition Really Looks Like in 2026, recruiting is becoming more autonomous at the execution level. But autonomy alone doesn’t solve the core hiring problem.
You still need a better way to evaluate people.
That’s where skills-first hiring comes in.
For decades, degrees were used as a shortcut.
Not because they reliably predicted success, but because they reduced perceived risk and simplified decision-making.
That logic no longer holds.
Roles are changing too fast. Job titles mean less than they used to. And in a market where AI can generate a polished resume in seconds, pedigree is an even weaker signal.
Companies need capability, not credentials.
The bigger shift isn’t just skills-based hiring. It’s skills intelligence.
Instead of organizing work around static job descriptions, companies are starting to think in terms of capabilities. Work is assigned based on skill, not hierarchy or tenure.
This is the same evolution happening across workforce planning more broadly. Not headcount planning, but capability planning.
And it’s the only model that holds up in a fast-moving market.
Skills-first hiring is gaining traction because it solves multiple problems at once.
It improves quality of hire.
It increases internal mobility.
It reduces bias tied to pedigree.
And it aligns better with how work actually gets done.
But it’s also accelerating for a more practical reason.
The resume is no longer reliable.
As we covered in The AI-on-AI Hiring Arms Race, recruiting teams are now dealing with a flood of highly optimized, AI-generated applications. Many look great on paper and collapse under real scrutiny.
When that happens, skills-based evaluation stops being a “nice to have.” It becomes the only way to restore signal.
Now layer in Gen Z.
By 2026, Gen Z is one of the fastest-growing segments of the workforce. They are also the least tolerant of slow, opaque hiring processes.
One of the most important data points in the market right now is this:
A majority of Gen Z candidates will drop out if a hiring process exceeds 22 days.
Speed, to them, isn’t about impatience. It’s about competence.
If a company can’t run a clear, efficient hiring process, candidates assume it can’t run the business well either.
It’s a trust issue.
A large percentage of job seekers report that looking for work negatively impacts their mental health. The biggest driver isn’t rejection.
It’s silence.
Waiting to hear back. No closure. No clarity on next steps.
For Gen Z, that lack of transparency is a dealbreaker. It signals misalignment, not just poor communication.
In 2026, how you hire is inseparable from how you’re perceived as an employer.
For Gen Z, the hiring experience is part of the offer.
They expect:
If the process feels like a black box, they assume the culture is the same.
This is where skills-first hiring and agentic systems intersect. Technology can speed up execution, but only leadership can ensure the experience remains human.
The companies adapting fastest in 2026 are focused on a few fundamentals:
Skills-first hiring isn’t just about fairness. It’s about accuracy.
And Gen Z isn’t asking for special treatment. They’re forcing employers to modernize a hiring process that’s been broken for a long time.
The companies that adapt will hire better, faster, and with less churn. The companies that don’t will keep blaming the market while losing candidates to competitors who simply run a better process.
Most companies agree with skills-first hiring in theory. Very few have operationalized it in a way that actually improves outcomes. If you want help redesigning your hiring process for 2026, especially around skills-based evaluation and candidate experience, we can help. Reach out and we’ll walk you through what’s working right now.