
Despite recent rounds of layoffs from IT giants, the trade association reported nearly half a million open postings last month.
Published Nov. 13, 2025
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The CompTIA analysis comes amid a drought in official employment data, as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics has delayed the release of its monthly jobs report amid the government shutdown. The agency might never release data for the impacted timeframe, White House officials said Wednesday.
The lack of government data has put private sector data in the spotlight, including from payroll services company ADP, which determined private sector employers added 42,000 jobs to the economy last month. A Pew Research Center report found a strong correlation between the payroll processing company’s data and official BLS reports.
Despite some positive signals, the technology sector is still assessing the effects of significant layoff waves at major tech providers. IBM last week joined a string of employers in the sector that culled their headcounts by several thousand.
Layoffs are a sign of shifting strategies, according to Art Zeile, president and CEO of DHI Group, Dice’s parent company. Zeile pointed to thousands of open job postings at companies that announced cuts.
“You’ve got to see the big picture,” Zeile told CIO Dive. “Accenture announced 11,000 layoffs in October, but they had the fifth highest number of tech job postings in the United States at the same time.”
A Dice review of Lightcast job posting data showed a growth spurt in AI-specific roles as enterprise adoption of the technology progresses. Postings for cloud infrastructure architects increased nearly fivefold year over year, with some roles such as AI trainers seeing increases of more than 6,000%.
CIOs grappling with AI adoption plans can set up dedicated councils to govern the technology and manage its effects on the workforce.
“AI fundamentally affects every functional area inside of the organization that a CIO is supporting,” Zeile said. “And you need to get the buy-in of those functional areas.”