The “2026 State of Tech Talent Report” was recently published by Linux Foundation Research. “Over the past several years, the Linux Foundation has surveyed hiring and training stakeholders to capture the state of the technical talent market amid technological shifts and economic changes,” wrote authors Adrienn Lawson, Marco Gerosa, and Anna Hermansen in the report’s executive summary. “This year’s study is based on an online survey fielded in February 2026, which collected responses from 400 participants worldwide and examined the impact of AI, especially generative AI, on the IT talent market.”
The report’s central conclusion is both clear and timely: despite widespread concerns about AI-driven job displacement, the technology sector is facing a skills crisis rather than a jobs crisis.
“While AI is a net driver of job creation in IT, with a +31% net hiring effect expected for 2026, organizations are struggling with a major full-stack readiness problem,” wrote the authors. “Security concerns are also the #1 barrier to getting value from new technologies. To counter these challenges, organizations strongly prefer upskilling existing staff over external hiring, preserving institutional knowledge and boosting retention.”
“There is little doubt that AI is changing the IT job market,” the report added. “Adoption is widespread and organizations across industries and regions are integrating AI into core business functions.” This widespread adoption raises important questions. Where do organizations expect AI to deliver value? Is that value coming at the expense of technical jobs, or is it creating new ones? What skills are required to operationalize AI at scale, and how are organizations developing those capabilities? (more…)
