Project Managers Lead Hiring in Ceipal’s 2026 Jobs Report

Operational Support Rises To the Top Skill as Cloud, Data, and Enterprise Expertise Continue To Command Six-Figure Salaries

Ceipal, a leading AI-powered global staffing software provider, today released its 2026 In-Demand Jobs Report, revealing that Project Managers are the most in-demand role as organizations prioritize modernization while maintaining operational stability.

Based on an analysis of 20,000 jobs from Ceipal’s system, the report shows employers increasingly seeking professionals who can bridge business needs and technology transformation, rather than replace existing systems outright.

“Enterprises are modernizing with intention, not ripping and replacing,” said Sameer Penakalapati, Ceipal’s Founder and CEO. “The strongest demand is for leaders who understand both legacy environments and modern platforms, and know how to move organizations forward without disrupting what already works. That ability to balance progress with stability is becoming a defining advantage in today’s hiring market.”

Key Findings from the 2026 Report Include:

  • Project Manager ranks as the most in-demand job, followed by Business Analyst, together accounting for more than a quarter of top roles
  • Operational Support is the most in-demand skill, rising from No. 16 last year to No. 1, signaling a renewed focus on reliability and continuity
  • Java, last year’s top skill, remains critical despite slipping to second place
  • Solution Architect roles command the highest average salary at nearly $154,000, with all top 20 roles exceeding $120,000
  • Texas leads the nation in both job volume and highest median pay

Business and Technology Skills Drive Hiring Decisions
The report shows a growing premium on professionals who combine technical expertise with strong communication, operational awareness, and business acumen.

Cloud, data, and automation remain foundational skill sets, while test automation and enterprise system knowledge are now considered baseline requirements rather than differentiators. While attention around AI continues to grow, adoption remains incremental and largely embedded within existing roles—reinforcing the ongoing importance of core enterprise skills.

For employers, this shift signals a need to rethink hiring strategies around adaptability and cross-functional expertise, rather than narrow technical specialization.