Tech giants, universities, consultancy firms and a retailer are among Australia’s top hirers for artificial intelligence related roles, according to analysis by job-site Indeed. The government’s scientific research organisation CSIRO emerged as the top seeker of candidates for AI roles, measured by number of jobs requiring related skills posted to the website this year. In second place was IBM, followed by Zendesk, Culture Amp, Macquarie University, Google, Atlassian and BCG Digital Ventures. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe The rapid rise of the specialised field is leading to a ‘skills mismatch’ said Indeed’s APAC economist Callam Pickering. “That is, the skills in demand from employers are not necessarily the skills possessed by job seekers. This often happens because the skills in demand are rapidly changing, reflecting the needs to adapt to new technologies,” he told CIO Australia. “Artificial intelligence is an extremely specialised field and that can make attracting skilled candidates difficult. Its recent emergence means that there are limited workers in Australia who can be considered AI experts. This has been hindered further by immigration policy,” Pickering explained. Indeed defines AI-related roles to include data scientists or software engineers job postings with specific machine learning skills requirements, as well as more specialised roles such as machine learning engineer. “Employees working with AI are typically trained in coding and modelling. They will have detailed understanding of one or more coding language. They will be well versed in machine learning.But as an emerging industry the skills in demand are constantly evolving,” Pickering said. The number of AI roles advertised on Indeed has trended upwards over time, but postings peaked in June and fell slightly towards the tail end of this year. Nevertheless job postings for AI-related roles doubled in October compared with the same month last year and average job postings per month are up 154 per cent on last year. “As an emerging and still quite small industry, the number of opportunities available at any one time will be quite volatile. So we tend to focus on the broader trend. That trend is certainly very positive. We anticipate further growth next year,” The rise in demand from firms has been matched, however, by rising interest from job-seekers in pursuing AI related careers. “The number of clicks on AI-related jobs has tripled this year compared with last. Hopefully this means that skill-shortages, to the degree they exist, are not getting worse,” Pickering said. The top 25 hirers for AI-related roles in Australia this year were: CSIRO IBM Zendesk Culture Amp Macquarie University Google Atlassian BCG Digital Ventures Intellify Avanade University of Adelaide University of Melbourne BI Group WoolworthsROKT Akuna Capital University of New South Wales SAP Servian EY Domain Group Microsoft University of South Australia Deloitte Oracle Related content feature Gen AI success starts with an effective pilot strategy To harness the promise of generative AI, IT leaders must develop processes for identifying use cases, educate employees, and get the tech (safely) into their hands. By Bob Violino Sep 27, 2023 10 mins Generative AI Innovation Emerging Technology feature A fluency in business and tech yields success at NATO Manfred Boudreaux-Dehmer speaks with Lee Rennick, host of CIO Leadership Live, Canada, about innovation in technology, leadership across a vast cultural landscape, and what it means to hold the inaugural CIO role at NATO. By CIO staff Sep 27, 2023 6 mins CIO IT Skills Innovation feature The demand for new skills: How can CIOs optimize their team? By Andrea Benito Sep 27, 2023 3 mins opinion The CIO event of the year: What to expect at CIO100 ASEAN Awards By Shirin Robert Sep 26, 2023 3 mins IDG Events IT Leadership Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe