47% Firms Hire Mid-Career Talent, 38% Find It Hardest to Source: NIIT India Skills Gap Report
BusinessWire India
New Delhi [India], April 2: NIIT Ltd., a leading Skills & Talent development corporation, today launched the NIIT India Skills Gap Report 2026, a nationwide study conducted in partnership with YouGov. The survey, based on insights from 3,500 respondents spanning students, working professionals, recruiters, CXOs and academic leaders across key sectors, highlights how digital, data and cybersecurity skills are emerging as foundational capabilities for employability and workforce growth, while industry-recognised certifications and diversity-led skilling are increasingly shaping hiring confidence across organisations.
Mid-career talent, reskilling and institutional readiness
Encouragingly, 69% of organisations increased their learning and development budgets in the past year, driven by business growth and digital transformation priorities. Additionally, 54% of employers run structured apprenticeship or internship programmes, while scalable EdTech partnerships are gaining traction as a preferred model for delivering industry-aligned, inclusive skilling at scale.
Across the hiring ecosystem, digital and data skills consistently rank among the top three most critical capabilities for the next 3-5 years across all cohorts surveyed, i.e. students, employees, recruiters, CXOs and academia. Early-career professionals demonstrate higher confidence than students in cybersecurity basics (64 vs 57), cloud tools (66 vs 56) and data analysis (67 vs 56), while senior management reports the highest overall confidence levels, reflecting experience-backed skill accumulation.
Notably, 86% of recruiters and CXOs express confidence in their ability to access skilled talent over the next 3-5 years, with internal reskilling and upskilling capacity (26%) and industry-academia partnerships (24%) cited as the strongest enablers of hiring confidence.
As organisations integrate AI into business operations, hiring signals are becoming more precise and outcome-driven. The study reveals that 38% of respondents agree that employers increasingly value certifications and micro-credentials beyond traditional degrees, reflecting a clear move away from degree-only hiring norms.
The report highlights a clear shift in how organisations approach inclusion through capability building. 44% of organisations now explicitly integrate diversity and inclusion (D&I) goals into all skilling and development programmes, indicating that diversity-led skilling is increasingly embedded into core workforce strategies rather than treated as a standalone initiative.
To access the full report: Link
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