The Marketing Talent Market: Recalibrating Not Contracting
If you're hiring marketing talent right now or considering your next career move the market can feel contradictory.
On one hand, there are fewer marketing roles being advertised than there were during the hiring frenzy of 2022. On the other, employers continue to tell us they're struggling to find the right people.
So, what's really happening?
Looking at the latest SEEK and LinkedIn data, alongside what we're seeing every day across Australia's marketing, digital and communications landscape, the answer is surprisingly positive: the market isn't contracting, it's recalibrating.
We've moved well beyond the hiring peak of May 2022, when marketing job volumes surged by 28.6%. Compared to those unprecedented levels, today's market can feel quieter. However, the reality is that marketing hiring has settled into a more sustainable and deliberate rhythm.
SEEK's latest data shows marketing job advertisements softened by 1.7% month-on-month. While any decline can sound concerning in isolation, context matters. Compared to sectors experiencing much steeper contractions, marketing continues to demonstrate resilience and remains one of the more stable professional hiring markets.
Why Hiring Still Feels Hard
Perhaps the most interesting insight is that while job volumes have moderated, hiring hasn't necessarily become easier.
According to LinkedIn's latest research, 66% of recruitment and talent professionals say it has become harder to secure high-quality talent over the past 12 months.
Because organisations are no longer hiring for narrow specialisations. They're looking for marketers who can blend creativity with commercial acumen, understand customer behaviour, leverage data effectively and demonstrate measurable business impact.
"The brief has become broader, and the expectations higher"
At the same time, the candidate experience has changed. With AI-powered tools helping professionals optimise resumes and applications, many candidates appear increasingly similar on paper. The challenge for hiring managers isn't attracting applications it's identifying the people behind them.
AI Is Raising The Bar
It's impossible to discuss the future of marketing talent without discussing AI.
Recent research from Anthropic found that Market Research Analysts and Marketing Specialists rank among the occupations most exposed to AI, with approximately 64% of tasks showing potential for AI augmentation. Activities such as preparing reports, visualising data and translating findings into written summaries are increasingly being supported by AI tools.
"Exposure doesn't equal replacement"
What we're seeing is AI automating tasks rather than eliminating roles. The technology is helping marketers work faster and more efficiently, while increasing the value of skills that remain uniquely human—strategic thinking, creativity, stakeholder management and commercial judgement.
The marketers who will thrive won't be those competing with AI, but those who know how to use it effectively. The best marketers will use AI as a tool, not a crutch.
Where We Continue to See Investment
Despite economic pressures, several areas of marketing continue to attract significant investment.
Growth Marketing
The focus has moved beyond channel execution. Businesses are investing in marketers who can connect acquisition, retention and revenue growth, taking a full-funnel view of customer engagement and business performance.
Social Media, Content and Creator Partnerships
As audiences increasingly value authenticity and connection, brands are continuing to invest in specialists who understand community building, creator ecosystems and platform-first storytelling.
While AI can generate content at scale, businesses are increasingly recognising that genuine audience engagement still requires a human touch. As a result, we continue to see strong demand for marketers who can build communities, shape brand narratives and create content that resonates.
CRM and Customer Lifecycle Marketing
As privacy regulations evolve and third-party data becomes less reliable, first-party customer relationships have become increasingly valuable. CRM specialists remain among the most sought-after marketers, helping businesses drive retention, loyalty and customer lifetime value.
Skills Are Becoming More Important Than Titles
One of the strongest themes emerging from LinkedIn's 2026 workforce research is the shift towards skills-first hiring.
As AI reshapes tasks across many professions, organisations are placing less emphasis on rigid career pathways and traditional job titles, and greater value on adaptability, learning agility and transferable capability.
For marketers, this presents a significant opportunity. The professionals standing out in today's market aren't necessarily those with the most linear careers. They're the ones who can demonstrate impact, commercial thinking and the ability to evolve alongside changing customer expectations and emerging technologies.
Looking Ahead
The marketing talent market isn't experiencing a downturn as much as a reset.
Hiring is more deliberate. Expectations are higher. The skills that organisations value are evolving. But the fundamentals remain strong.
For employers, success will come from looking beyond keywords and resumes to identify the capabilities and behaviours that drive performance. For candidates, it's about clearly articulating outcomes, impact and the unique value they bring. Because while technology continues to change how we hire, great careers and great teams are still built by people.
Perhaps that's why the most successful hiring decisions still come down to people. In a market increasingly shaped by technology, understanding the person behind the resume may be more important than ever.










