Key market signals and business challenges from TechServe Alliance’s January Executive Roundtables—illustrated in the infographic below, with additional insights available upon request.
During TechServe Alliance’s January Executive Roundtables, more than 60 IT and engineering staffing leaders compared notes on market conditions, operational pressures, and the signals shaping their outlook for the year ahead. While 2025 delivered uneven results across geographies, verticals, and service lines, many participants pointed to late-Q4 momentum and strengthening early-2026 pipelines as meaningful signs of progress. The insights below reflect where leaders are seeing recovery take hold—and where continued discipline remains essential.
Market Conditions: Uneven Recovery with Cautious Optimism
Participants broadly described 2025 as uneven, with performance varying by geography, vertical, and service mix. While many firms experienced flat or modest growth, late-Q4 momentum and early-2026 pipelines are stronger, driving cautious optimism.
Key observations:
- Increased requisition volume and job activity beginning in December and January.
- Improved direct hire activity alongside contract/project work.
- Recovery signals strongest in healthcare, government/defense, infrastructure, data centers, cybersecurity, and select regional markets.
- Sales environments remain competitive, with clients more selective and procurement cycles still elongated.
Overall sentiment reflects a belief that 2026 will be better than 2025, though leaders remain vigilant given ongoing economic and geopolitical uncertainty.
Common Business Challenges
Across groups, several challenges consistently surfaced:
- Sales Effectiveness & Pipeline Development
- Cold outreach is producing diminishing returns; relationship-based selling is outperforming volume tactics.
- Sales teams are being pushed toward in-person meetings, industry-specific events, and deeper account penetration.
- Many leaders noted tension between time spent generating leads vs. maintaining and expanding existing client relationships.
- Cash Flow & Deal Structure
- Payment delays and longer invoicing cycles remain an issue.
- Firms are increasingly using structured payment terms, upfront fees, and selective client engagement to protect cash flow.
- Simpler MSAs and shorter contracts are preferred to reduce legal friction and speed deal closure.
- Talent Retention & Compensation Pressure
- Retaining strong recruiters and salespeople is increasingly difficult amid competitive labor markets.
- Regulatory changes in certain states are driving higher fixed compensation costs.
- Leaders emphasized the need for career-path clarity, role alignment, and proactive communication to prevent burnout and attrition.

Taken together, the January roundtable discussions point to an industry that is stabilizing and recalibrating rather than accelerating. Growth remains selective, sales cycles are still elongated, and firms continue to navigate cash flow, talent, and regulatory pressures. At the same time, improving activity in key verticals and a stronger outlook for 2026 are reinforcing cautious optimism. Leaders agreed that firms prioritizing relationships, operational efficiency, and thoughtful adaptation are best positioned as the recovery continues to unfold.
- AI adoption trends rooted in practicality—not hype
- Shifting hiring and skill demand patterns
- Organizational and operating model adjustments
- Where recovery is strongest
- What tech staffing leaders are watching as 2026 approaches