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Employers Stall on Hiring

Gap widens between openings and hires, according to iCIMS data

Quality Digest
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Thu, 12/11/2025 - 12:03
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(iCMS: Holmdel, NJ) – iCMS, a leading talent acquisition software company trusted by major brands, has released its iCIMS Insights November Workforce Report examining the latest trends in job openings, applications, and hires. According to the report, candidate interest appears to be cooling as employers stall hiring amid ongoing market uncertainty. The report also includes a special focus on manufacturing, pointing to growing candidate interest in the industry.

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iCIMS data showed a dip in candidate interest, while employers continue to open roles but are not following through on the hires. Overall applications dropped 7% between September and October 2025 but were still up 9% year-over-year. Following a hiring surge that peaked in April and again in July, hiring has gradually declined, with overall hires dropping 5% since October 2024. Despite lackluster applications and hires, openings continue to climb up 4% year-over-year, their highest level in 12 months.

“More openings, slower hiring rate. That mismatch won’t last,” says Trent Cotton, head of talent acquisition insights at iCIMS. “Frustrated candidates drop off fast, so the firms that cut red tape and move top talent through quickly will own the market.”

Key hiring trends in manufacturing are drawn from iCIMS’ proprietary data from thousands of organizations.

Manufacturing’s midyear hiring peak has fizzled: Manufacturing job openings are up 14% year-over-year and have been trending upward since June 2025, but that’s not translating into hires. Manufacturing hiring is down 7% year-over-year, signaling that manufacturers are easing up after a midyear rally. Applications are also up 12% since October 2024 but have fallen for two consecutive months.

Manufacturing applicants are showing up: Manufacturing applicants per opening (APO) rose from 41 to 47 year-over-year, reflecting growing candidate interest in the sector. The applicant activity appears to be tracking employer demand, as APO peaked midyear alongside hiring growth and has eased in recent months as hiring momentum slowed.

Slower moves, fewer hires: Time to fill in manufacturing increased from 40 to 42 days year-over-year, suggesting employers are making slower hiring decisions in a cautious market. But moving too slowly could mean losing critical hires.

What roles are driving manufacturing applications?

The report shows that manufacturing may have benefited from tech-sector layoffs, capturing displaced talent with transferable skills. APO for computer and math roles in manufacturing grew 27% year-over-year (65 to 83), while architecture and engineering roles rose 24% (51 to 64).

“The manufacturing sector is feeling a sharper talent squeeze than the broader market,” says Cotton. “Applications per opening are rising, yet time to fill has barely moved as openings climb and hiring slows year over year. The data point to process friction, not pipeline scarcity. For manufacturing recruiters, the edge will go to those who treat hiring like production: Measure throughput, eliminate bottlenecks, and keep talent moving.”

Download the iCIMS Insights November Workforce Report for a deeper dive into the latest labor market and manufacturing hiring trends.

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