AI Is Changing the Job Market: What You Need to Know in 2026
Justin Bartak
Founder & Chief AI Architect, Orbit
Building AI-native platforms for $383M+ in enterprise value
The market you prepared for doesn't exist anymore.
276,000 tech workers laid off in 2024 and 2025. A 14% drop in entry-level tech hiring for workers under 30. Anthropic's internal research suggesting AI can handle roughly 75% of the tasks traditionally performed by programmers, with huge caveats about quality, context, and judgment.
Those aren't projections. Those are receipts. And if you're searching for work right now, you're feeling every single one of them.
What AI is actually doing
The conversation always lands in one of two exhausting camps: the optimists saying AI creates more jobs than it destroys, and the doomers saying we're all getting replaced. Both are wrong. The truth is more specific and more useful.
It automates tasks, not jobs
This is the framework that actually matters, from MIT and Stanford economists. AI doesn't delete your job title. It eats specific chunks of your workday. A software engineer who spends 30% of their time writing boilerplate code? That 30% is getting automated. The 70% that involves architecture decisions, stakeholder communication, debugging novel problems, mentoring junior engineers? That's still deeply, irreplaceably human.
The skills that command a premium are shifting. It's less about how fast you can execute and more about how well you can think, decide, and collaborate alongside AI. That's a meaningful change. Not a death sentence.
Winners and losers
Roles getting hit hardest right now:
- Data entry and processing. High automation potential everywhere.
- Routine code generation. AI pair programming handles the boring stuff.
- Content production at scale. SEO articles, product descriptions, templated copy.
- Tier 1 customer service. Chatbots handle 60 to 70% of routine inquiries now.
Roles gaining value:
- AI/ML engineering. Building and deploying the systems everyone else is using.
- Product management. Translating messy human needs into technical requirements. Still deeply human work.
- Security and compliance. AI introduces new attack surfaces and nobody knows the rules yet.
- Creative direction. AI can generate. Deciding what to generate and why requires a soul.
- Sales and relationship management. Trust doesn't automate.
The vast middle
Most people are somewhere between these poles. Your job isn't disappearing, but the way you do it is changing. The ability to use AI as a multiplier instead of fighting it? That's becoming the defining professional skill of this decade.
What this means for your search
1. Show that you work with AI, not against it
Mention specific AI tools in your resume. "Used GitHub Copilot to reduce sprint delivery time by 20%" is a real bullet point that tells a hiring manager exactly what they need to hear: you're not threatened. You're fluent.
2. Lead with judgment
For every task AI automates, there's a human layer required to verify, contextualize, and actually apply the output. That's you. Your resume should scream decision-making, cross-functional collaboration, and navigating ambiguity. Those are the things AI is worst at and companies need most.
3. Go where the money is flowing
Healthcare, fintech, enterprise SaaS, defense, energy. These sectors are investing heavily in AI adoption and they need people who understand both the tech and the domain. A nurse who gets ML. A financial analyst who can prompt-engineer. That cross-functional expertise commands a serious premium.
4. Plan for a longer timeline
The average tech job search stretched to 5.2 months in 2025, up from 3.8 in 2023. More applicants per role, AI-assisted screening on the employer side, narrower funnels everywhere. This isn't a sprint. Manage your energy like it's a marathon, because it is.
5. Build where people can see you
In a market flooded with AI-generated applications, demonstrated expertise is the signal that cuts through the noise. GitHub contributions, blog posts, open-source projects, thoughtful commentary on social. The work you show is worth more than the work you describe.
Using AI to search for work
Here's the beautiful irony: the same technology reshaping the market can also help you navigate it. Resume tailoring, interview prep, company research, networking follow-ups. All of it accelerates with AI.
Orbit bakes AI directly into the job search workflow. Scout AI for research and strategy. AI resume tailoring for each application. Smart contact parsing. The point isn't to automate your search. It's to give you back the hours you'd waste on busywork so you can spend them on the parts that are still irreducibly human: building relationships, preparing thoughtfully, making good decisions.
The uncomfortable truth
AI isn't coming. It's here. It's already inside the hiring process, already reshaping which skills get rewarded, already changing what a career looks like. The people who thrive through this won't be the ones who ignored it or the ones who panicked. They'll be the ones who picked up the tool and learned to build with it.
Uncertainty is the price of admission to every era that mattered.
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