I hope these memes won't discourage you from a career in the IT sector. In the UK, for example, tech jobs are as hot as ever: job search engine Adzuna has reported that for the past few months, there have been consistently over 100,000 tech job offers per week live on the platform, with one week in May even seeing an unprecedented peak of 132,000 offers.
The data, which was compiled for the UK government's digital economy council, suggests that the industry is recovering from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic (for comparison, last June saw tech vacancies fall to less than 44,000 offers).
However, the council suggests the new figures aren't only reflective of a strong comeback from a year of crisis. Tech hiring hasn't been this high since 2016.
This might be due to increasing investment in UK tech companies. Last year, VC investment reached £11.6 billion ($16 billion); only six months into 2021, UK tech companies have already raised £11 billion ($15.3 billion) in venture funding, putting the industry well on track to surpass previous numbers.
"When you look at the amount that has been raised since the end of 2020, the numbers are really consistently strong," Liz Scott, head of entrepreneur engagement at tech networking organization Tech Nation, which is part of the government council, told ZDNet. "I don't think we are looking at 2021 being strong in comparison to a pandemic year, but at being back to record-breaking numbers."
One of the most in-demand jobs across the UK is software developer, for which there were nearly 10,000 vacancies just in April alone.
Also popular are AI and data science jobs such as AI engineers or programmers. A recent report from Ipsos Mori found that close to 110,500 job openings were posted in the AI labor market last year – double the number of vacancies registered in 2014 and a 16% increase from 2019.






















