
As for what jobseekers can do in the face of such instability, her advice is both practical and forward-looking.
“In 2025, jobseekers should seek to polish both digital and interpersonal skills to remain competitive. There’s no doubt that AI has had a significant impact in the workplace. In fact, the use of AI at work doubled in just the first six months of 2024, and job postings increasingly require technical AI skills, even in non-tech sectors.
“That being said, distinctly human capabilities are becoming more valuable than ever as AI and automation transform workplaces across industries. My organization conducted an analysis last year that found that human skills - such as communication, creativity, teamwork, and problem solving - are in high demand from employers across a range of sectors. In a world where AI can analyze data or generate content, uniquely human skills cannot be automated and will continue to be highly sought after by employers.”
Employers must step up or risk falling behind
Countryman-Quiroz is clear that resilience doesn’t just come from individual jobseekers. Employers have a critical role to play, too.
“Employers that invest in their workforce are better equipped to weather economic shocks. Your talent is your most valuable asset, and when they’re hurting, you’re hurting. But you can build a more resilient workforce amid these shocks by investing in upskilling and training. Employers that invest in their workforce tend to see lower turnover and higher productivity, which will be crucial during these uncertain times. Forward-thinking companies will recognize that workforce development is not a cost to be cut, but a competitive advantage. Investing in your workforce is not only good for business, it gives your employees security in a really uncertain world.”
And for those at the strategy table, the message is clear - rethink how you hire and who you hire.
“When the market changes, you want a team that can pivot with it. Building diverse, inclusive talent pipelines will be key to staying resilient during these uncertain times. That means rethinking traditional job qualifications like degree requirements, that may exclude highly capable candidates who took nontraditional career paths.
“One way to do this is for employers to partner with workforce development nonprofits like JVS. Employers often have financial resources and industry-specific knowledge, but not the capacity or expertise to build effective and inclusive training programs.
“They may also be blind to some of the systemic barriers facing jobseekers, such as inability to access housing, transportation, or childcare.
“By partnering with nonprofits that specialize in workforce training, employers can connect with highly-specialized training expertise and built-in understanding of tactics to help jobseekers overcome structural barriers.”
In other words, as tariffs and economic shocks take hold, the path forward isn’t to go backwards, it’s to invest. And for JVS, that means investing in people.