
The talent market in 2026 has a split personality. Some technical leaders are struggling to fill roles that have been open since January. Others are in a full sprint, competing for candidates who have three offers on the table. Same year, completely different reality.
Where you land depends on your industry. Here’s what’s happening.
The overall labor market has slowed down in 2026, and that’s not nothing. Job creation has dropped sharply compared to pre-tariff levels, tariff-related uncertainty is putting a damper on headcount planning, and the Iran war has added another layer of economic uncertainty that has leaders watching energy costs and consumer demand closely. Many companies are in “wait and see” mode heading into summer.
But “slow” doesn’t mean “stopped.”
According to Robert Half’s latest Demand for Skilled Talent report, technology leaders are ramping up hiring in the second half of 2026, with 78% planning to increase permanent headcount and 66% expecting to bring on more contract professionals. The challenge? Sixty-five percent of those same leaders say finding skilled talent is harder than it was a year ago.
That tension, more hiring intent paired with a tighter talent pool, is the defining story of this market.
The “tech hiring freeze is over” narrative circulating out there is only partly true.

The companies hiring well in IT right now have one thing in common. They stopped counting heads and started counting on the right ones. There’s a big difference between filling a seat and filling a gap.
Not every IT role is moving. Generalist and entry-level developer positions are still largely sitting on the sidelines. But certain specializations are a different story entirely. Cybersecurity, senior cloud, applied AI, and infrastructure roles are moving fast.
AI is driving a lot of that movement. Only 7% of tech leaders say they currently have the capabilities needed to execute their priority projects this year, and 65% say they need to up-skill their current teams. That gap is creating real demand for IT professionals who can bridge legacy systems and AI-enabled operations.
Contract and contract-to-hire talent is filling that gap for many teams, allowing companies to move forward on critical initiatives without waiting months for a perfect full-time hire.
This is where things get especially seasonal, and if you’re in manufacturing, you already know this.

June and July traditionally bring reduced hiring activity as plants run summer maintenance shutdowns, production planning cycles reset, and budget conversations happen before Q3 really gets going. That pattern is playing out as expected in 2026.
Broader manufacturing headwinds are real, though. Blue-collar employment has been declining since early 2025, and the sector is dealing with rising input costs, shifting supply chains, and an uneven impact from tariff policies. Workforce availability has quietly become one of the biggest constraints on manufacturing growth this year, with smaller and mid-sized states experiencing particularly acute hiring pressure relative to their existing workforces.
The roles that are moving despite the slowdown tend to be technical ones including:
Companies are protecting those skillsets even when they’re pausing elsewhere.
If there’s one sector that stands out heading into the second half of 2026, it’s medical device and life sciences quality and compliance.

After a difficult few years of layoffs, hiring freezes, and cautious capital deployment across pharma broadly, the medical device sector is entering an expansion phase. Device manufacturers are scaling up around diagnostics, digital health, minimally invasive technologies, and advanced manufacturing. And the talent market is tightening fast.
The roles in highest demand right now include:
These are the people who determine whether a product makes it through the pipeline on time and in compliance, and companies are competing hard for them.
What makes this sector’s talent challenge unique is the specificity of the skills required. You need someone who understands both the technical depth and the regulatory environment. That combination is genuinely scarce, and candidates who have it are often fielding multiple opportunities simultaneously.
For employers in this space: if you’re waiting to kick off a search, the market is not getting easier. The companies moving proactively right now will hire better and faster than those waiting for the “perfect time.” If you’re not sure where to start, that’s exactly what we’re here for.

Whether you’re feeling the sluggishness of a summer slowdown or navigating a fast-moving search in life sciences, a few things hold true heading into the back half of 2026.
The second half of 2026 has real momentum building, especially in technology and life sciences. The hiring environment isn’t easy, but the companies navigating it well are the ones treating talent strategy as a business priority, not an HR afterthought.
If you’re working through a complex search in IT, engineering, or quality and compliance, Theoris has been helping organizations do exactly this for over 40 years. We’d be glad to talk through what you’re seeing in your market.
Theoris is an IT and engineering staffing firm based in Indianapolis, specializing in contract, contract-to-hire, and direct placement solutions across IT, engineering, and life sciences quality and compliance. Learn more .