Job market stories
Most Australian workers using AI at work have had no formal training, leaving security, privacy and skills gaps as adoption races ahead.
Despite regular use in study, most young Australians fear AI will destroy jobs rather than help them get hired.
AI skills are pushing up salaries across Australian workplaces, with employers struggling to price talent amid fierce competition.
Employers are tightening recruitment as 88% struggle to find workers with AI skills, while 37% say AI-written CVs cloud judgement.
Employers are rewarding office presence with higher salaries and bonuses as hybrid staff risk falling behind on pay and progression.
Clerks and telemarketers are among 417,000 workers facing the highest AI displacement risk, according to a new Australian occupations map.
As AI automates routine coding, architects who design systems and exercise judgement build the most durable, bias-resistant tech careers.
Australia's hiring market swells with applicants, yet firms still battle to secure scarce finance, data, AI and cybersecurity skills.
Entry-level hiring, not a lack of talent, is keeping many would-be Web3 workers out, with 54% citing experience demands as the main barrier.
Entry-level hiring is being reshaped as employers expect junior staff to supervise AI, while 61% in India struggle to find suitable talent.
Firms risk costly missteps as automated hiring filters miss staff who could be retrained for AI-augmented roles.
The launch aims to let firms and software agents use Salesforce data and workflows inside coding tools and collaboration apps, cutting build times by up to 40%.
Employers facing widening AI skills gaps may find the new certificate more useful because it verifies practical work, not just course completion.
Only about one in 10 senior finance candidates can prove practical AI use, leaving UK employers short of leaders able to meet new hiring demands.
Most applicants miss out because their CVs fail to mirror job-ad wording, rather than being blocked outright by software, new research suggests.
Lack of training is pushing many Irish staff to seek new roles, as 44% say they get no learning opportunities and 39% want out.
Singapore jobseekers face fiercer competition as LinkedIn’s latest ranking shows financial services still dominate career-growth prospects.
Stable job figures hide 'glass floor' as cautious employers demand experience for entry roles, shutting younger workers out.
Singapore employers tighten permanent headcount, channelling spend into scarce AI, cyber and data skills while ramping up contract hiring.
Employers warned jargon-laden job ads packed with 'rockstar' and 'ninja' clichés may signal burnout and bias, putting off strong candidates.