The concept that job security is parlous is something foreign to me. I think if you are good at your job you will always have work, whether as an employee, as a contractor, with your own practice, etc. There is demand for everything as long as you are good at your job.
Dunno, I've been reading numerous horror stories about the state of tech job hiring atm. Seemingly qualified people spending months and months looking, and getting zero offers. Perhaps they're all just bad at their jobs, or (more likely) bad at interviewing? But it's enough to give me pause as a tech worker myself.
I'm a super versatile experienced (25 years) software engineer with 2 years of self-taught data science experience, plenty of cloud / devops experience.
I've only been VERY casually looking for the past 5 months, but I have had exactly ZERO response to my (multiple versions) resumes in that time. Note that because I'm furloughed and collecting unemployment, I have to submit my resume to 2 positions each week.
The last time (and every time) I've looked for a job, I had an
offer within 3 weeks of
starting to look. (Most of my career, I've been recruited out of the blue with no effort on my part.) My current job was one where I knew a guy who knew a guy, and I interviewed, but at the time they went with someone more junior and affordable. Then a year later, they called me and gave me
what I asked for (which was higher than what I'd asked for a year earlier.) They didn't have me re-interview. I've been there 5 years, but am now furloughed due to a bunch of misfortunes affecting our company; no fault of our own. (High interest rates, low venture capital pool, one client went bankrupt which hurt us in multiple ways, another client had an unexpected CEO death! Other projects are pending but not yet signed. And so on.)
Maybe I'm "suddenly" bad at my job ;) or maybe, just maybe, the over-hiring during COVID, the lay-offs of 2023, and the "return to office" mandate (which is another form of layoffs) just maybe indicates a big shift in the tech job market?
There's also something to be said for the gold rush for "AI" (e.g. machine learning being applied in new and novel ways, and utilizing the big, popular models and their APIs). Most of us, however senior as we are, have very little experience in this new area of technology, but the companies that are hiring "only" want someone with experience, because they don't want to risk being left out of the cool new thing. This happens from time to time, and it will likely shift again over the next 6 months as various companies figure out what's necessary to pursue, technologically speaking, and what can be safely put off for now.
If you're in tech and
need work, skill up!