New Dice Report Reveals Tech Professionals in Defensive Job Market Mode
Key Terms
ai governance technical
ghost job technical
ai policies regulatory
True to Dice's commitment to transparency and reducing friction in the tech hiring market, this report delivers candid insights into the evolving dynamics between tech professionals and employers. By equipping the tech community with clear, actionable intelligence about workforce sentiment, Dice empowers all stakeholders to navigate today's market with confidence and make more informed decisions.
The research exposes unprecedented disconnects between movement and confidence, revealing a workforce repositioning defensively rather than opportunistically. Key findings include:
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74% of tech professionals plan to change employers in the next year, yet only41% feel confident they'll find something better -
There was a nearly
50% increase in those who reported feeling ”burnout” from31% to46% , with70% of very burned-out professionals actively job searching - Job stability climbed from #4 to #2 among reasons for switching employers, signaling that security has become a primary driver of career moves
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Daily AI use quadrupled, yet
63% of non-AI tech professionals believe AI eliminates more jobs than it creates -
Only
34% of tech professionals remain untouched by layoffs, down from56% in 2023, with29% expecting future cuts at their current employer
"What we're witnessing isn't the traditional desire to job-hop,” said Paul Farnsworth, President of Dice. "Tech professionals are moving to prioritize stability. This creates a unique challenge for employers: you have a highly mobile talent pool, but candidates are harder to close because they're moving due to anxiety, not optimism."
Market Data Confirms the Strain
Objective market data reinforces what the report’s sentiment findings already suggest: the tech job market has cooled significantly. Tech job postings currently stand at 575,000, according to the report’s analysis of Lightcast data. This is below even pre-pandemic 2019 levels and less than half the Q2 2022 peak of 1.3 million. This contraction explains why
Beyond headline mobility numbers, the research reveals critical pressure points:
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82% of tech professionals believe they applied to a "ghost job" (roles posted with no intention to hire) in the past year -
52% applied for roles significantly below their skill level just to secure employment -
Long-term confidence in tech's growth dropped from
80% to60% , with concern about decline nearly tripling - Remote work surged from #7 to a top-three motivator for switching employers, while advancement opportunities became less influential.
AI Governance Emerges as Critical Retention Lever
Even as AI adoption accelerates, with
The governance gap drives risky behavior:
"This research confirms what many suspected, but few had quantified: the tech workforce is under sustained, structural pressure," said Art Zeile, CEO of DHI Group, Inc. "By providing transparent data on burnout, mobility drivers, and AI's impact, we're equipping employers and staffing firms with the intelligence needed to compete effectively. Organizations that understand why candidates are moving will win placements their competitors miss."
Where Retention Risks Concentrate
The report identifies specific segments facing the highest flight risk: women, Black tech professionals, Gen X, mid-career workers (5-19 years of experience), and those at small companies. These groups report higher burnout, greater layoff concerns, and lower confidence in job stability. In contrast, Gen Z shows surprisingly low flight risk despite being earlier in their careers, raising questions about generational differences in risk tolerance and market expectations.
What This Moment Demands
Stability is now a baseline expectation for competitive hiring. Employers that communicate transparency around AI governance, maintain clear policies, demonstrate financial health, and acknowledge market strain are better positioned to attract talent. For staffing firms, understanding where leverage exists in the candidate pool creates an advantage in sourcing and placement strategy. The report also includes supplementary job market data analyzing salary trends, volume changes, and geographic variations across roles, skills, and regions to support strategic decision-making.
Methodology
This report draws on findings from a November-December 2025 survey of 1,159
To access the full report, click here.
About Dice
Dice is a leading tech career hub connecting employers with skilled AI and technology professionals and providing tech professionals with career opportunities, data, insights and advice. Established in 1990, Dice began as one of the first career sites and today provides a comprehensive suite of recruiting solutions, empowering companies and recruiters to make informed hiring decisions. Dice serves multiple markets throughout
About DHI Group, Inc.
DHI Group, Inc (NYSE: DHX) is a provider of AI-powered career marketplaces that focus on technology roles. DHI's two brands, Dice and ClearanceJobs, enable recruiters and hiring managers to efficiently search for and connect with highly skilled technology professionals based on the skills requested. The Company's patented algorithm manages over 100,000 unique technology skills. Additionally, our marketplaces allow tech professionals to find their ideal next career opportunity, with relevant advice and personalized insights. Learn more at www.dhigroupinc.com.
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Source: DHI Group, Inc.