Why Utahâs Silicon Slopes hiring feels like itâs at a standstill: âItâs taking a toll.â
Why Utahâs Silicon Slopes hiring feels like itâs at a standstill: âItâs taking a toll.â
Cody Scottâs foray into the tech sector began at Snow College, where the then-football player and some of his friends built an app to help fellow students find events and parties. The startup went on to get early accolades, and it planted a seed for Scott.
He found he was good at this type of work, designing software and products for real people, âbeing very empathetic to the problems that the userâs facing.â
He knows it sounds âcheesy,â but he started to see tech as a relatively quick way to earn a high salary, support his family and achieve the American dream.
âAs long as you have the skillset and you understand how to work within that culture, you can sort of climb the ladder,â he said, âwhich is what Iâve been doing.â
As he jumped to different tech jobs over the years, his income provided everything for his wife and their two kids, he said.
Until November 2024, when Scott lost his remote job as a senior product designer and spent more than a year searching for another. His wife, who was studying nursing, had to get a job. They had to work with their mortgage lender to pause payments so they didnât lose their home.
âWe were OK,â he said, âbut we were literally just scraping by throughout the whole year.â
Itâs not just Scott. Many others told a similar story â filing job application after job application, seemingly into the void.
Hiring and job growth are slowing nationwide as economic uncertainty remains high, and the national unemployment rate increased to around 4.4%, according to the most recent , up a tenth of a percentage point from November. Utahâs is lower at 3.6%, but still up from a year ago.
The tech industry has been hit particularly hard, all as artificial intelligence proliferates and the torrent of investments that once flooded the field have slowed with higher interest rates.
Utahâs Silicon Slopes region is no outlier. The stateâs tech hub had been steadily growing until a recent slump âamid a slowing economy and increased funding costs,â Gwen Kervin wrote in a 2024 . The Utah nonprofit also called Silicon Slopes, which empowers local startups and businesses, declined comment.
Kervin, a senior economist with the Utah Department of Workforce Services, said there are signs of recovery.
And Madison McCord, chief human resources officer at Domo, the Utah-based business intelligence company, said the situation is âreally a sign of durability,â and the ânatural effects of success.â
âWe see this moment less as a slowdown and more as a reset toward sustainable growth, one that strengthens the local ecosystem. And at the same time,â McCord added, âit is creating room for the next wave of scrappy startups.â
When the search starts to wear people down
For many displaced workers, though, a rebound doesnât feel realistic.
Itâs not unusual in the tech sector to weather layoffs and restructuring. But Scott is one of many who have struggled to find work in this particular period of disruption.
âI stopped counting my applications around 500,â Scott said in January. He estimates he submitted about double that number.
As the search dragged on, Scott said, he started to think â despite his qualifications and years of experience â that he was the problem.
Was he not talented enough? Had he not developed enough new skills, what the industry refers to as âupskillingâ? He wondered whether heâs not the type of Black guy people might âwant him to beâ â âentertaining,â like âKevin Hart, Will Smith,â instead of the âlaid back and chillâ person he is.
âItâs like, thatâs ridiculous. I canât even believe I was thinking it, but it does it to you, when youâre being told no over and over again,â he said. âYouâre just searching for answers.â
Matt Schulz, LendingTreeâs chief consumer finance analyst, said social media is full of posts from people feeling dejected.
âAll it takes is spending 30 seconds on LinkedIn to see the frustration that is out there among job seekers,â Schulz said.
The ones who spend months, a year, or more looking for work arenât just struggling financially, he said. âItâs taking a toll on them emotionally, and theyâre trying to keep their hopes up,â Schulz said. âIt isnât easy.â
Right now, there just arenât enough Utah tech jobs for the amount of people seeking them, according to â,â a popular Silicon Slopes parody and gossip-gathering Instagram account with more than 7,400 followers.
The person who runs the account told The Tribune that they have worked in Utahâs tech industry for years. They fear revealing their identity could lead to retaliation from employers, and The Tribune has agreed to not use their name.
They said theyâve heard from people who are âwell-connectedâ who have gotten jobs within months â giving credence, they said, to the idea that itâs less about what you know than who you know.
But theyâve also heard from well-connected people who spent nearly a year searching before eventually taking other âtransitionalâ jobs to make ends meet.
Hiring managers are also feeling the pressure, the âFry Sauceâ admin said, adding theyâve heard that some roles have received 500 to 800 applications within a week of being posted.
âI donât think most companies are intentionally excluding people; itâs more that the sheer volume of applicants has broken the traditional hiring process,â they said. âCombined with risk-averse hiring, budget freezes, and fewer open roles overall, it creates a system where a lot of good candidates are effectively invisible.â
Greg Green lost his job at Oracle in March, after more than 20 years with the company. While job hopping can be a good thing â and can lead to higher wages and career advancement â Green stayed at Oracle because he needed security.
Green, 58, has diabetes. He and his wife also have three children, two of whom are permanently disabled and dependent on them. He needed to make sure he didnât lose health insurance or other benefits and could take care of himself and everyone else. The remote aspect of his job was also important.
âBecause I could stay at home and take care of my daughter, and I could also get insurance, and get my job done, and be appreciated for that,â he said, âbut it wasnât enough.â
Since he was laid off, Green has applied to hundreds of jobs. And nearly as many times, heâs heard some version of this same refrain: We appreciate the time that it took to complete this application. Due to the overwhelming number of applicants, weâve decided to continue with other applicants for this role.
Or, he said: We regret to inform you that the role was filled. Good luck.
âItâs just over and over,â he said.
At Domo, managers havenât âslowed hiring,â according to McCord.
âBut we have gotten more intentional about it,â she continued.
âAs the business has matured,â McCord said, âweâve focused our hiring on roles that directly support customer value and long-term growth strategy.â
For Domo, that means hiring developers and salespeople with experience that aligns with their cloud partnerships with Snowflake, Databricks and Google.
Is AI to blame?
At least part of the industryâs slowdown is because of artificial intelligence.
The proof was in a chart projected around the Grand Americaâs ballroom in January, where lawmakers and business leaders gathered ahead of the legislative session to discuss the economic outlook and weigh the impact of public policy.
As the graph indicated, the rollout of ChatGPT in late 2022 coincided with the slowdown job seekers are seeing.
âLike every tool thatâs ever been invented, it can be a positive,â Gov. Spencer Cox said about AI. Former Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, who , pointed to AI benefits for public safety, such as using it to time street lights or guide first responders to emergencies.
But it also comes with disruption.
âAI will take some of our jobs,â Cox continued. âAnd whatâs a little different about this disruption, or this evolution, that weâre seeing right now is historically, when weâve had new tools, the disruptions have really affected the blue-collar workers.â
âPlumbers,â Cox said, âare going to do really well in this evolution.â
But AI isnât the only force contributing to the slowdown. High interest rates and economic uncertainty also play a role. Years of overhiring during the pandemic-era tech boom, followed now by a shift to investing in data centers, are also factors, said Mary Hall, director of the University of Utahâs .
White-collar workers faced similar challenges when the personal computer, the internet, the cellphone and cloud computing were invented. Despite earlier challenges, those technologies all led to new industries and jobs, she said.
âThere may be a transition period now,â Hall said, âbut we expect this to follow that same pattern, with normalization and then another period of growth.â
Right now, the tech industry seems to want people with more experience as AI takes over tasks typically reserved for junior engineers.
At Domo, McCord said, âAI is definitely part of what is reshaping the talent market, but for us itâs not about replacing people, itâs about changing how work gets done.â
She said the company has created an âAI councilâ to evaluate how the technology is used internally.
âThe goal is to help teams work smarter while keeping humans firmly in the loop when it comes to judgment, context, and accountability,â she said.
Reasons for optimism
Younger workers new to the labor market are having the most trouble finding jobs. The unemployment rate for those age 20-24 is well above the national rate, at 8.2%, according to . Since at least 2001, a gap like that has existed, but itâs widening.
âThe current no-hire, no-fire labor market â and the prospect of a jobless expansion â is an enormous challenge for members of Gen Z who are just now entering the labor force,â according to a November .
These workers are âmore vulnerable to economic downturns,â the briefing continued, because they havenât yet accumulated wealth. That means a âweak labor market can have a lasting negative impact on wage growth and earning potential.â
Job seekers are also getting trapped by an increase in so-called ghost jobs, , where a listing is posted but no one is ever hired, either because itâs fake or because a company posted for more open positions than needed. For every two job postings, one doesnât get filled, NPR reported.
Employers are implementing AI to help they get, too, which can cull good candidates in the process. Some candidates are using AI to fight back and .
Hall said her school is updating its curriculum to help better prepare students. Theyâre adding a new minor in AI this fall, as well as AI pathways within their majors and additional courses on cloud computing and data centers. Professors are also coaching students to look beyond traditional tech jobs, she said.
Thereâs some good news on the horizon: The percentage of Utah businesses that planned to add new employees in the coming months was higher than the percentage who expected to cut staff, according to the U.S. Labor Departmentâs December jobs report.
Schulz, with LendingTree, said a downturn in Utahâs tech industry would be âa big dealâ for the state.
âThis data doesnât suggest that, though,â he said, adding that âI think, in all, that bodes well for Utah.â
Utahâs own jobs report also had promising signs, Kervin said.
That , released about a week ago, shows the state added 21,800 jobs in a year â a 1.2% gain compared to national growth of 0.3%.
Growth in the information sector was even higher, Kervin said, at 6.3%.
âIâm not seeing, in Utah, what is perhaps happening in the rest of the United States,â she said.
Utah has made attracting tech companies a priority, she said, and the stateâs efforts â and talent pool â are paying off.
âIt looks like Utahâs growth in this sector is outpacing what we see in the rest of the United States,â Kervin said, especially in software development, data processing and data warehousing.
Whether that holds true, she said, is harder to say. The state will release its annual projections in the spring.
Green, whose severance ran out six months after he was laid off, is still holding out for a tech role. He thinks this AI âhype bubbleâ will eventually pop. âIf I can survive that long,â Green said, âI might get a job coming off the end of that.â
In the meantime, he said, he stopped taking medications that helped control his blood sugar to cut costs. He also recently tapered off his antidepressants, both to save money and to avoid the potential side effects of stopping cold.
Thanksgiving and Christmas, he said, were hard. âI donât feel very hopeful about the future,â he said.
Scott did end up landing a job â 13 months after his search began. It pays less than he hoped and itâs not remote, requiring him to come into an Orem office, but itâs a job.
âEven though I landed on my feet, like, itâs not without some collateral damage,â he said, âand itâs just like, I just have a sour taste in my mouth to this industry.â
He said when he got started in tech about eight years ago, there seemed to be more of an âentrepreneurial spirit.â Jobs allowed more autonomy and the culture felt more optimistic and exciting, where the âbest idea wins.â
Now, Scott said, it feels like thereâs less interest in solving problems or creating new ways to do things.
âItâs more [about] creating shareholder value,â he said, âand whateverâs best for the bottom line.â
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