Since the advent of AI and the current swell of automation being adopted across every industry, we’ve heard a lot of chatter about how this will affect jobs in the future.
We’re here to cut through the noise and deliver the real read on AI in the job market.
Tech jobs are not disappearing due to AI. The are being redefined.
The difference between being displaced by AI and being in demand because of it increasingly points to skills, not job titles.
What is Happening Right Now in the Tech Job Market
According to the Australian Computer Society (ACS) Digital Pulse report, Australia’s technology workforce passed one million workers in 2024, growing by 60% over the past decade. However, the same report purports that demand is still outpacing supply, with 1.3 million tech workers projected to be needed by 2030 to meet industry and government demand.
At the same time, we’ve seen a shift in hiring patterns.
- Reduction in entry level roles
- Need for more specialised digital skills
- Stronger alignment between technical roles and business outcomes
AI is Changing the Game, But Keeping the Players
Australian employers are adopting AI faster than they’re hiring more people to support it.
Globally, companies have begun to openly acknowledge that AI tools can replace routine tasks performed by junior developers, QA testers, customer support technicians and operational IT staff. We can see that same pattern emerging locally, especially in large enterprises and digitally mature organisations.
However, AI will not reduce the need for expertise. Rather, it will advance it.
According to Jobs and Skills Australia’s 2025 Occupation Shortage List, many tech related occupations continue to be listed in shortage nationally or at state level, especially roles requiring experience, judgement, and system level thinking.
Where Tech Hiring is Most Robust
Despite headlines, demand for skilled tech workers remains strong across multiple sectors.
It was estimated that Australia would face a shortfall of up to 30,000 cyber professionals by 2026, cautioning that the gap would widen without accelerated training and reskilling.
Gartner forecast that Australian organisations will spend over AU$7.5 billion on cybersecurity in 2026, driven by AI enabled threats and stricter regulatory expectations.
Australia is quietly becoming the AI infrastructure capital of the Southern Hemisphere. Global and local investment in data centre systems has grown significantly, largely driven by AI-optimised infrastructure.
We’re at the forefront of this global cloud transformation as we evolve from cloud expansion to optimisation and governance. CIOs are shifting their attention to interoperability, identity controls, and scaling AI workloads effectively.
Why the Market Feels Different
For job seekers, this may feel like a tightening of the market. However, it’s simply a recalibration.
Employers are:
- Hiring fewer generalists
- Prioritising experience over potential
- Choosing candidates who can work with AI, not compete against it
As many entry level tasks that were once used for training newly minted tech workers have now been automated, early‑career professionals may notice the difference.
Increasing Your Employability in Tech Roles
Becoming a sought after candidate in the current job market increasingly is shifting to skill adjacency and capabilities rather than academic credentials, job titles and singular utility specialisation.
Job seekers become more attractive to employers if they can:
- Integrate AI tools into workflows
- Manage data securely
- Design systems that scale
- Understand regulation, risk and ethics
Skills That Are in High Demand:
AI & Data
- Applied AI (using tools, not just theory)
- Data Engineering & Analytics
- Machine Learning Operations and automation oversight
Cyber & Security
- Cloud Security
- Incident Response
- Identity & Access Management
- AI‑aware security practices
Cloud & Infrastructure
- Azure, AWS or GCP
- Infrastructure as code
- Platform reliability and resilience
Human Skills
- Problem solving
- Stakeholder communication
- Adaptability
- Ethical and responsible AI literacy
Skills Declining in Value:
- Manual QA testing
- Repetitive IT support workflows
What This Means for You
AI has not heralded a tech jobs shortage, but a transformation of tech skills.
AI is changing how work gets done, not eliminating the importance of IT professionals.
For job seekers willing to upskill, reskill or specialise, the prospects are promising. Continuous learning opens up opportunities for roles that are evolving or yet to be established.
It is time to reframe how AI will affect jobs for candidates. Learning how to work with it will increase your chances of career success.
