Across Australia, organisations are investing more than ever in digital transformation. But many are running into a familiar challenge – technology on its own doesn’t deliver value. It’s the engineering capability behind it that determines whether ideas actually get built, shipped, and scaled. And for many teams, that capability gap is becoming one of the biggest barriers to real innovation.
Demand for software engineers is now well above pre-pandemic levels, and it’s not just about hiring more people. The skills required have also shifted. AI, automation, cloud infrastructure, and microservice-based architectures are now part of everyday engineering work, yet many teams are still building capability in these areas.
The result is a widening gap between what organisations want to deliver and what their current teams are equipped to build. And increasingly, recruitment alone isn’t closing that gap. More organisations are realising they need to grow capability from within, strengthening the skills of their existing teams so they can keep pace with modern engineering demands.
This blog looks at the trends shaping Australia’s software engineering workforce, why these skill gaps persist even as hiring conditions evolve, and what it really takes for organisations to build strong, future-ready engineering capability that supports sustained digital performance.
In Australia, the need for software engineers isn’t slowing down anytime soon. As businesses continue investing in digital platforms, SaaS products, AI tools, and smarter customer experiences, software engineers remain at the centre of how organisations innovate and grow.
That said, the hiring landscape is beginning to shift. For the first time in five years, software engineers are no longer officially classified as being in national shortage, according to new data from Jobs and Skills Australia. The data shows shortages have eased across every state and territory, signalling that the intense scramble for talent seen in recent years is starting to stabilise.
But “stabilising” doesn’t mean demand has disappeared. Software Engineer still ranks among the most advertised tech roles across NSW, VIC, QLD, and SA for both permanent and contract positions. In fact, the broader “Engineering – Software” category saw job ad growth rise by 6.7% over the past year, even while overall job ads across all industries declined by 9.3%.
Australia is currently home to around 55,200 software engineers, yet employers are still struggling to hire in highly specialised areas. Skills in AI, cybersecurity, cloud engineering, automation, and scalable software systems are especially sought after as organisations accelerate their digital transformation efforts.
According to the Tech Council of Australia, more than 300,000 additional tech workers will be needed nationally by 2030, with software and application programming remaining one of the country’s most important capability areas.
Cybersecurity is one area where the talent gap remains particularly sharp. Industry forecasts suggest Australia will need an additional 85,000 cybersecurity professionals by 2030, despite the sector already employing more than 125,000 people today. That growing demand has even sparked discussions around expanding skilled migration pathways to help fill critical roles.
So while the broad shortage of software engineers may have eased, the bigger picture is clear: organisations are still competing hard for experienced, specialised talent – especially in the areas shaping the future of technology.
Even though the broader software engineering shortage has started to ease, many organisations are still struggling to build the capability they actually need. The challenge is no longer just about hiring more engineers; it’s about finding people with the right mix of modern technical skills, product thinking, and real-world experience.
Several structural challenges continue to widen the capability divide:
Modern engineering teams today need more than strong coding ability alone. As software delivery becomes faster, more distributed, and increasingly AI-driven, engineers are expected to combine solid fundamentals with modern cloud, automation, and data capabilities to keep pace with contemporary product development.
Recruitment on its own just isn’t enough anymore to close software engineering capability gaps. Hiring still plays an important role, but it can’t keep pace with how fast technology is evolving, especially when demand for specialised skills continues to outstrip supply.
A few key factors are driving this reality:
This is why capability building has become such a focus for Australian organisations. The shift is moving away from simply filling roles and towards strengthening teams from within, building shared engineering language, consistent practices, and stronger technical foundations. Done well, it doesn’t just help teams deliver faster; it creates the conditions for lasting, scalable transformation rather than short-term fixes.
More organisations are starting to realise that sustainable engineering strength doesn’t come from hiring alone; it comes from building engineering capability internally, over time. Instead of treating skills gaps as a recruitment problem, leading teams are investing in structured uplift that strengthens how engineers actually work day to day.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
When organisations commit to this kind of approach, the results tend to compound quickly. Teams often see faster delivery cycles, fewer production defects, reduced reliance on external contractors, and more consistent digital outcomes. More importantly, they build internal capability that continues to grow rather than needing to be repeatedly bought in from the outside.
Academy Xi works with organisations across Australia to build practical, workforce-ready software engineering capability that directly supports how modern teams design, build, and deliver digital products.
One of our key offerings in this space is the Software Engineering: Advanced Certificate. This program helps engineers strengthen both core and advanced skills, from system design and cloud-native development through to DevOps practices and secure coding, all grounded in real-world application rather than theory alone.
For organisations, it’s a practical way to lift capability across teams, improve delivery consistency, reduce reliance on external contractors, and build stronger alignment between engineering and product functions.
If you’re thinking about how to strengthen software engineering capability in your organisation, our team would be happy to chat and help you explore the right approach for your workforce.
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