Business Was there a tech-hiring bubble? - Indeed.com job postings data suggest so

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account

1678892844403.png


We recently discussed Information industry jobs data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: That post showed that layoffs in Information were elevated relative to layoffs for non-farm employment overall. Today we examine job postings data from Indeed.com to answer a related question: How have the help wanted ads in the US tech industry compared with the rest of the labor market?

The FRED graph above taps into a recently expanded dataset from Indeed.com to compare changes in the level of job postings for the tech industry with changes in the level for all job postings. The black dashed line shows the indexed trend of all job postings; the red line shows the trend of postings in information technology operations and helpdesk positions; and the blue line shows the trend in software development job postings. These daily data are reported as an index with a value of 100 on February 1, 2020, and represent changes in the level of postings relative to that date.

The graph shows that the overall level of job postings declined during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, bouncing back to pre-pandemic levels 12 months later. Soon after, and while help wanted ads for IT operations and helpdesk staffing remained depressed, the level of job postings in software development started to quickly outpace the rising national trend.

At their peak in late February 2022, help wanted ads for designing computer applications or programs more than doubled their February 2020 level. In contrast, IT operations and helpdesk staffing roughly kept up with the national trend. Over the past year, the decline in software development job postings has been swift and, again, has outpaced the gradual decline in overall job postings.

Finally, other datasets from the same source show similar ups and downs in other countries around the world (see here and here). So, although the data from Indeed.com is not as comprehensive as the BLS data, they suggest a large-scale cycle in tech industry employment is over.

How this graph was created: Search FRED for “Software Development Job Postings on Indeed in the United States.” Next, click the “Edit Graph” button, select “Add Line,” and search for “IT Operations and Helpdesk Job Postings on Indeed in the United States.” Repeat the last step to add “Job Postings on Indeed in the United States.” Use the “Format” tab to change the lines style and color.

Suggested by Diego Mendez-Carbajo.




Learn to code dig ditches. :story:

Considering how many devs on IT are practically "digital handymen", overpaid and behaving like prima donnas (especially you pajeets), they might as well start picking up some real skills.
 
Considering how many jobs have been suked into tech out of the blue collar industries since Gen x, then promoting the hell out of that in schools, add 2020 into the mix, no shit
 
Why are you lumping helpdesk staffing and IT ops together. This tells me that you either have an agenda or don't know what the fuck you are talking about.
 
Why are you lumping helpdesk staffing and IT ops together. This tells me that you either have an agenda or don't know what the fuck you are talking about.
Oh no quite the contrary - I've done Level 1 support many moons ago, dealing with users was torture. But I am grateful for all those years.

I may or may not work as SRE--devs these days are definitely too entitled.
 
Okay.

Now remove all the jobs that were going to go to the H1B's and associated slave labor type position.
 
Oh no quite the contrary - I've done Level 1 support many moons ago, dealing with users was torture. But I am grateful for all those years.

I may or may not work as SRE--devs these days are definitely too entitled.
Did you write this article? I mean, I guess it is somewhat ambiguous (and silly of me (although it is common practice here)), but I was directing that to the author, not you, the poster.
 
Did you write this article? I mean, I guess it is somewhat ambiguous (and silly of me (although it is common practice here)), but I was directing that to the author, not you, the poster.
Nope, not mine.

But I'd say that lumping the two together is due to sheer ignorance; I've heard time and time again how the IT grunts are asked to fix Nespresso machines "because they're connected". 😩
 
Back
Top Bottom