94% Exposed, 30% Adopted: Why Engineering Leaders Need to Rethink How They Hire
The gap between what AI can do and what it's actually doing is closing. If your hiring process still optimizes for the implementation layer, you're selecting for the part that's being automated. If...

Source: DEV Community
The gap between what AI can do and what it's actually doing is closing. If your hiring process still optimizes for the implementation layer, you're selecting for the part that's being automated. If you lead a software team, the way you evaluate and hire developers is shifting. Ignore it, and you'll miss strong people or hire for the wrong things. This isn't theoretical. Anthropic just released labor market data, and it points to a real change in how we should think about technical talent. 94% of coding tasks could be handled by AI. Only about 30% actually are today. That gap is closing, and it's already changing what a "good developer" looks like. The numbers Peter McCrory, Anthropic's head of economics, shared more context in Fortune. Their March 2026 report, "Labor Market Impacts of AI: A New Measure and Early Evidence," introduced a framework called "observed exposure" — combining theoretical LLM capability with real-world usage data from Claude. The top-line numbers stand out: Occu