DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

PwC wants to hire ‘hundreds and hundreds’ more technologists. Its global boss says it can’t find the right people.

November 24, 2025
in News
PwC wants to hire ‘hundreds and hundreds’ more technologists. Its global boss says it can’t find the right people.
Mohamed Kande
Mohamed Kande, global chairman of PwC, said the firm is seeking “the right skillset for the right work.” PAU BARRENA/AFP via Getty Images
  • AI is changing the type of work that consultancies offer — and the expertise they need to do it.
  • Mohamed Kande, PwC’s global chairman, told the BBC his firm wants to hire more technologists.
  • The Big Four firm is struggling to find the talent it wants to hire.

PwC wants to hire more tech talent. There’s just one problem — it can’t find them.

“Across the PwC network, we are looking for hundreds and hundreds of engineers. We just cannot find them,” Mohamed Kande, global chairman of PwC, told the BBC in an interview.

Traditionally, professional services firms have prioritized generalist, critical thinkers, and strong communicators. Now, technologists are in high demand, and top firms have been racing to bolster their ranks with tech talent through a mix of hiring and upskilling.

Accenture’s latest annual report shows it added nearly 40,000 AI and data professionals in the last two years. They now account for roughly 10% of its global head count. EY has made an even bigger push, adding 61,000 technologists since 2023.

The new demand for tech capabilities is tied to the changing nature of the work that top consulting firms offer their clients.

McKinsey recently told Business Insider that delivering straight strategy advice — the type of work typically associated with consultants — now only accounts for around 20% of the company’s work. Instead, McKinsey is offering more “deep implementation expertise” and multi-year transformation projects.

Kande told the BBC that advising clients on how to implement AI will be at the heart of PwC’s future business strategy.

PwC did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

PwC block outside
PwC Leon Neal/Getty Images

Kande said he didn’t know if PwC would continue hiring graduates at the same rate. “It will be a different set of people. But we are going to make sure we have the right skillset for the right jobs,” he told the BBC.

In August, Business Insider obtained part of an internal presentation showing that PwC US planned to cut graduate hiring by a third over the next three years.

A bullet point on the presentation slide said leadership’s decision to slow down associate-level hiring related to “transformation efforts, the impact of AI, and further AC integration” — with AC integration referring to PwC’s acceleration centers, its name for its offshoring hubs.

The firm told Business Insider at the time that the “rapid pace of technological change” was reshaping its operations, and that it was being “prudent” in response to “historically low levels of attrition.”

PwC UK has also reduced its entry-level recruitment in the UK this year, lowering the intake by 200 compared to last year. Marco Amitrano, the UK head, credited the decline in junior hiring to the impact of AI and a sluggish economy.

In 2021, then under the leadership of Bob Mortiz, PwC announced a plan to recruit 100,000 people by the middle of 2026. The firm is roughly 40,000 employees away from hitting that target, according to its latest head count released in October.

“The world looked very different” when those plans were made, Kande told the BBC, adding that meeting the goal was no longer possible

Have a tip? Contact this reporter via email at [email protected] or Signal at Polly_Thompson.89. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post PwC wants to hire ‘hundreds and hundreds’ more technologists. Its global boss says it can’t find the right people. appeared first on Business Insider.

At just 24, this ‘extraordinary’ L.A. musician plays a violin older than the United States
News

At just 24, this ‘extraordinary’ L.A. musician plays a violin older than the United States

November 24, 2025

For years, Colin Maki and his associates — purveyors of some of the finest and rarest violins ever made — ...

Read more
News

Every major store that’s open on Thanksgiving — and 20 that are closed

November 24, 2025
News

‘We’re toast!’ Sweeping losses spiral Virginia GOP into finger-pointing panic

November 24, 2025
News

The Real Fight Over Geoengineering Is Beginning

November 24, 2025
News

Think you know Disneyland history? New exhibit unveils rarely seen concept art

November 24, 2025
Trump-branded phone’s ‘made-in-USA’ message scrubbed as it falls way behind release date

Trump-branded phone’s ‘made-in-USA’ message scrubbed as it falls way behind release date

November 24, 2025
The Hardest Job in San Francisco

The Hardest Job in San Francisco

November 24, 2025
‘Everybody Loves Raymond’ is more than just a saying, 30 years on

‘Everybody Loves Raymond’ is more than just a saying, 30 years on

November 24, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025