January 13, 2026
January 13, 2026
Photo by Tim Mossholder on Unsplash
Nearly two-thirds of companies said attributing layoffs to artificial intelligence appealed to stakeholders more than citing financial constraints, per Resume.org.
In what the report dubbed “The Great Turnover,” Resume.org’s survey of 1,000 U.S. hiring managers, fielded in December 2025, found that most of the hiring — as well as most of the headcount reduction — was planned for early in 2026.
Nearly half (48%) of companies expect that layoffs “will definitely or probably occur in Q1,” while 86% expect to be hiring during that period. Companies that are holding back on hiring cited budget constraints (48%), revenue uncertainty (39%) and pressure to control costs (38%) as the main reasons, and only 6% of companies expect to be hiring by the end of 2026.
“What we are seeing is workforce rebalancing,” Kara Dennison, Resume.org’s head of career advising, said in the report. “Companies are laying off in areas that no longer align with near-term priorities while hiring aggressively in functions tied to revenue, transformation, and efficiency.”
A December study from ManpowerGroup found that many employers expect a stable hiring outlook moving into 2026. The report found that for employers looking to hire at the beginning of the year, 37% cited organizational growth, 26% mentioned investment in new business areas and 19% said they’re backfilling recent departures.
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