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Field study · 4 May 2026, 19:37 Live · YubHub

Read the titles, not the headlines.

The story we tell ourselves about AI and work usually arrives via headlines or vendor pitches. The story the labour market is telling itself sits in the live job ads. The two don't always match.

What follows is a read on 15,438 live AI roles right now. Borrowed methodology from Anthropic's Economic Index; the data is from our own jobs index. Treat both as a snapshot of this week, not a forecast - see what this dataset permits us to say at the foot of the page.

Which jobs is Claude already doing?
Top trending technical titles · year-on-year
Live · YubHub
  • senior software engineer +32%
    38 active · 6 a year ago
  • forward deployed software engineer +23%
    23 active · 0 a year ago
  • beauty expert +20%
    20 active · 0 a year ago
  • software engineer +19%
    28 active · 9 a year ago
  • principal software engineer +18%
    20 active · 2 a year ago
  • deployment strategist +17%
    19 active · 2 a year ago
Source · YubHub · 5 May 2026 Latest job figures + company intel ↗
15,438
Live AI roles
784
Hiring companies
298
Tracked feeds
4 May 2026, 19:37
Last refreshed

The picture that emerges from the live index right now isn't the headline picture. The headlines say AI is taking jobs. The data says jobs are reshaping, in three specific ways the headlines don't usually pick up. We argue them below - willing to be wrong out loud.

One. Where the titles are being created tells you more than where the layoffs are. "AI is replacing X" is a story that requires before-and-after data we mostly don't have. "AI has created the title Forward Deployed Engineer and there are now hundreds of live ads for it" is a story we do have. The latter is a leading indicator; the former is mostly anecdotal. (Caveat: a job ad existing is not the same as a hire happening, and a new title is not the same as new work.)

Two. The companies hiring hardest this week are not the ones with the biggest brand. Sort by jobs-this-week rather than total volume - see the panel below - and the ranking shifts. A company at 50% recent intensity is typically in an acute hiring round, often around a fundraise, a product launch, or a strategic pivot. That signal moves weeks before press coverage does. (Caveat: ATS plumbing varies - a feed that re-publishes is indistinguishable from a feed of new ads at the API level.)

Three. The senior-to-entry mix is the clearest read on where a discipline is in its life-cycle. A 70% senior split is a mature, saturated function - entry pipelines have thinned and the rewards live downstream. A 40% entry-level split with high volume is a category scaling fast enough to take people without a track record. Marketing, Operations and Sales each tell a different story; engineering tells the story everyone else is reacting to. (Caveat: the seniority classifier reads job-spec language, which compresses a noisy spectrum into three buckets.)

The most popular counter-argument to all of this - best made by Abigail Marks in The Conversation - is that AI hasn't yet caused mass unemployment, and the fear that it has is doing more economic damage than the technology. We think she's right about the fear being premature, and right that the data so far supports reshaping over replacement. The reading we make below assumes that frame.

01 · The new titles

What the foundation labs hire for first.

Forward Deployed Engineer, AI Deployment Strategist, Agent Reliability Engineer. None of these existed in volume two years ago. The companies running these ads are typically fifty times larger than their eventual buyers - when a title appears in the top tier here, you are looking at the work that will be commodified at scale within the year. Watch which titles rise; that's where to look for skills to pick up.

30
forward deployed software engineer
26
ai deployment strategist
21
deployment strategist

77 of the most-listed roles right now are titles that did not exist as named categories before the agentic-AI shift. The ones above sit in our current top twelve, ahead of established titles in adjacent disciplines.

Top live titles, ranked by current count
  1. 01 senior software engineer 65
  2. 02 software engineer 54
  3. 03 beauty expert 33
  4. 04 forward deployed software engineer AI-native 30
  5. 05 principal software engineer 29
  6. 06 enterprise account executive 27
  7. 07 ai deployment strategist AI-native 26
  8. 08 motorsport engineer 25
  9. 09 sales development representative 23
  10. 10 kfz-mechatroniker (m/w/d) 21
02 · Where the hiring is most aggressive

Who's moving, not who's big.

Total volume tells you who is big. Last-seven-day count tells you who is moving. Sort by recent intensity and the ranking shifts: companies with 40-60% of their current openings posted in the past week are typically in a discrete hiring round - a Series funded, a product launch, a strategic pivot. That signal moves weeks before press coverage does, and the titles they hire for are usually the cleanest read on what they're actually building next.

The pattern that holds: Anthropic and the foundation-model labs are the steady-state ceiling - they hire continuously, the index never empties out. Movers come and go above them on the seven-day cut, and that's the more interesting list. If you're reading this to figure out where to apply, ignore the steady names. Look at who's at the top of the panel above today and was not last week.

03 · Where the volume is

Where to apply effort, by life-cycle stage.

Engineering dominates by orders of magnitude - that's the easy read. The harder read is the senior / mid / entry split. A category that's mostly senior is mature and saturated at the top; pipelines into it are thin and rewards live downstream. A category with high entry-level volume is scaling fast and accepting people without a track record. If you are choosing a discipline to invest in, look at the entry-level columns below - that's where the doors are still open.

Most senior-skewed

Management Consulting

100% senior. Mature function - the work demands experience, and entry-level pipelines are thin.

Most entry-friendly (high volume)

Hospitality

41% entry-level. A category scaling fast and hiring early-career people in volume.

Category Total Entry Mid Senior
Engineering 8,894 817 1,882 4,979
Sales 1,669 228 400 703
Finance 1,002 96 269 566
Operations 826 235 217 291
Marketing 561 58 160 301
IT 323 52 70 180
Show 99 more categories
Design 268 19 62 148
Hospitality 258 106 52 87
HR 217 56 74 78
Legal 204 13 67 119
Manufacturing 165 61 47 36
Consulting 132 9 20 99
Retail 130 63 33 5
Other 39 9 8 4
Healthcare 37 7 13 10
Product Management 33 1 0 26
Food And Beverage 29 3 0 25
Customer Service 25 12 5 4
Customer Success 22 0 5 17
Security 17 4 0 9
Food Service 14 4 3 7
Human Resources 12 3 4 4
Entertainment 11 3 4 2
Management Consulting 8 0 0 8
Education 8 1 2 2
Supply Chain 7 2 1 4
Procurement 7 0 4 3
Business Development 7 1 1 5
Research And Development 6 1 1 4
Research 6 1 3 2
IT & Software 6 3 1 2
Analytics 6 0 0 5
Real Estate 5 2 0 0
Marketing & Sales 5 1 1 3
General Management 5 0 0 5
Communications 5 0 1 4
Administrative 5 1 2 1
Technology 4 0 0 2
Strategy 4 0 0 3
Media & Entertainment 4 0 2 1
Media 4 1 2 0
Data Science 4 0 1 2
Customer Support 4 2 1 1
Technical 3 2 0 0
Restaurant 3 1 0 0
Music 3 0 1 2
Localization 3 0 1 0
Intern 3 3 0 0
Community 3 0 0 0
Training 2 0 2 0
Quality Control 2 2 0 0
Quality Assurance 2 0 1 1
People 2 0 1 1
Nonprofit 2 0 0 1
Non Profit 2 0 1 0
Medical 2 0 0 2
Food & Beverage 2 0 0 0
Engineering|Sales|Marketing|Finance|Operations|HR|IT|Design|Manufacturing|Legal|Other 2 0 0 1
Business 2 0 0 2
Audit/Reporting/Risk 2 0 2 0
旋休 1 0 0 1
Transportation 1 1 0 0
Training And Development 1 0 1 0
Support Functions 1 1 0 0
Strategic Planning And Corp Dev 1 0 0 1
Software Development 1 0 0 1
Software 1 0 1 0
Scientific Research 1 0 0 1
Science 1 0 0 1
Sales Enablement 1 0 0 0
Safety|Environmental 1 0 0 1
Publishing 1 0 0 0
Public Policy 1 0 0 1
Production 1 0 0 0
Policy 1 0 0 1
Photography 1 0 1 0
Photo 1 0 0 0
Other Revenue 1 0 0 0
Media|Publishing 1 0 0 1
Mediate 1 0 0 1
Media And Entertainment 1 0 0 1
Materials And Procurement 1 0 1 0
Marketing & Ecommerce 1 0 0 1
Management 1 0 0 1
Logistics 1 1 0 0
Life Sciences 1 0 0 0
Lab Science 1 0 0 1
Information Technology 1 0 0 1
Housekeeping 1 1 0 0
Hotels 1 0 0 1
Hospitality & Tourism 1 0 0 1
Guest Svc 1 0 0 0
Fundraising 1 0 0 1
Finance/Accounting 1 0 0 1
Finance & Accounting 1 0 0 0
Facilities Management 1 0 1 0
Executive 1 0 0 0
Environmental Management 1 1 0 0
Editorial 1 0 1 0
Customer Experience 1 0 0 0
Creative 1 0 1 0
Corporate Development 1 1 0 0
Commercial 1 0 0 0
Advertising 1 0 0 1
Administration 1 0 1 0
04 · How to read this if you are…

Three takeaways for three audiences.

A graduate or career-switcher

Pick a category with high entry-level volume.

"AI engineer" is over-saturated and skill-gated. "Forward Deployed Engineer" and "AI Deployment Strategist" are reading the same skill stack but coming through doors that are still open - these companies are training people in. Look at the entry / mid columns of the categories above. Pick a category where the entry column is greater than 20% of the total.

A CEO, COO or Head of Operations

The titles you don't recognise yet.

Agent Reliability Engineer. Applied AI Engineer. AI Deployment Strategist. These are not synonyms for "developer." They are roles built around the gap between what an LLM can do and what a business can rely on. Twelve months from now, the question your board will ask is which of these your team has. Use the trend chart in the hero to add the words to your vocabulary.

A marketing or e-commerce director

The work that's being commodified.

The titles being hired into companies fifty times your size are the work that arrives at your door as a SaaS feature within a year. Look at the trending list and ask: what would my team's job description look like if half of this were already automated? That is the readiness conversation worth having now, not in twelve months.

Methodology

What this dataset permits us to say.

The dataset is young. Twenty weeks of live listings, sourced from 298 active feeds across employer ATS systems and aggregator APIs - no third-party panels, no surveys. Read the numbers on this page as a live tap off a growing dataset rather than the final word.

The exposure framework - "what AI could do" versus "what AI does" versus "what AI replaces" - is borrowed from Anthropic's Economic Index. We use their distinction throughout. Exposure is not the same thing as substitution. A title appearing in volume is exposure data. Whether the humans who used to do that work still have jobs is a separate question this dataset doesn't answer.

"AI-native titles" - Forward Deployed Engineer, AI Deployment Strategist, Agent Reliability Engineer, Applied AI Engineer, MCP Engineer, AI Engineer - are picked by name. The selection is editorial, not algorithmic.

"Aggressive hiring" sorts by jobs posted in the last seven days. The intensity percentage is jobs_last_7d / total_jobs per company. Caveat: ATS plumbing varies, and a feed that re-publishes ads on a cadence is indistinguishable at the API level from a feed of genuinely new ads. Treat the seven-day cut as directional, not surgical.

The entry / mid / senior split is YubHub's own role classifier reading job-spec language. The classifier compresses a noisy spectrum into three buckets - expect 5-10% noise on the mid-senior boundary. Categories with fewer than 200 live roles are excluded from the "where doors are open" callouts because the noise floor is too high.

The arguments on this page are ours. The data is the data's. Where they pull apart, we revise the argument.

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