Workers Say They’re Fine. Our Q2 2026 Data Says Look Closer.
The share of workers who said they were “extremely satisfied” dropped from 49.7% in Q1 to 41.7% in Q2, a 16% relative decline in the strongest tier in a single quarter. More people are settling into “somewhat satisfied” rather than thriving. A worker who’s somewhat satisfied is a flight risk the moment the market loosens up. Employers reading the headline satisfaction number and feeling comfortable are looking at the wrong signal.
The Employee Confidence Index posted the steepest decline of any measure we track, falling 2.5 points to 61.0. The driver is financial fragility. Nearly half of all workers, 49.5%, now have less than four months of emergency savings if they lost their job. That number was 45.5% in Q1. Four points in a single quarter. The gender split is striking too: 56.7% of women fall below the four-month line, compared to 43.9% of men. For entry-level workers specifically, 81% lack a four-month cushion, and 48.6% would need a new job immediately if laid off.
Workers may feel fairly secure in the job they have today, but many are not financially prepared for any real disruption. Nearly half are not able to cover four months without a paycheck, and that vulnerability worsened from Q1 to Q2.
The AI finding is the one that surprised us most. Executives, the workers with the highest overall satisfaction and confidence scores, are 2.5 times more likely to feel significantly threatened by AI than any other career stage. 30% of executives report significant AI threat concern, versus roughly 9-12% at every other level. The explanation isn’t hard to find: executives do pattern recognition, synthesis, and judgment-intensive work at scale, exactly what the current wave of AI does best. If you manage a team, don’t assume your senior leaders are insulated. They’re telling us they’re not. The AI Threat Index itself held nearly flat overall at 32.9, but that stability masks sharp industry-level shifts: financial services saw its AI threat score jump 17 points in a single quarter, and professional services jumped 15. The worry is concentrating on where AI adoption is moving fastest. Compare this to Q1’s results, and the directional shift is clear.
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Weekly Claims Ticked Up, But the Underlying Data Still Holds
The Department of Labor’s weekly claims report for the week ending April 4 showed initial claims rising to 219,000, up 16,000 from the prior week’s revised figure of 203,000. The four-week moving average rose to 209,500, up 1,500. That’s the less encouraging half of today’s report.
The more telling number is on the other side. Continuing claims fell to 1,794,000 for the week ending March 28, a drop of 38,000 and the lowest level since May 2024. The four-week moving average on continuing claims also hit its lowest point since June 2024. The insured unemployment rate held at 1.2%. When initial claims tick up but continuing claims fall, it suggests people who lose jobs aren’t staying on unemployment long; they’re finding work or exiting the count. The broader hiring rate data we’ve been tracking shows that’s not because the market is booming; it’s more likely because the pool of workers willing to file and search has narrowed.
The state-level picture is where regional divergence shows up most clearly. Texas added nearly 2,000 initial claims in a week, driven by layoffs in manufacturing and hospitality. Michigan shed nearly 2,800, reflecting fewer manufacturing separations. Those two states moving in opposite directions in the same week are a reminder that the national headline can flatten important local signals. Anyone doing workforce planning should be watching their regional numbers alongside the national average.
The Skill Employers Want in 70% of Job Postings Isn’t What Most People Expect
Indeed Hiring Lab’s new analysis pulled data from more than 3,000 individual skills across 48 categories, covering every U.S. job posting on Indeed from October through December 2025. The headline finding is straightforward and worth taking seriously: business operations skills appear in more than 70% of all U.S. job postings, by far the most of any skill category. Customer service and administrative skills are the most in-demand subcategories, appearing in 37.1% and 35.8% of postings, respectively. Communication and technology skills each appear in less than half of all postings.
Healthcare and caregiving skills lead the skill composition in 25 states, reflecting the sector’s sustained hiring dominance. Business operations skills lead in 20 states. What that means practically for job seekers: the operational fundamentals (knowing how to manage a calendar, run a meeting, handle an escalation, communicate clearly) show up in nearly three-quarters of job postings on the largest job board in the country. Those aren’t soft skills anymore. They’re table stakes.
The geographic variation matters just as much as the national number. Technology skills top the ranking in Maryland and dominate in Manhattan, Northern Virginia, and Silicon Valley counties. Vehicle operation skills lead in Wyoming, Kentucky, West Virginia, and Arkansas, where extractive industries and logistics shape local demand. The national average can mislead a job seeker or a workforce planner who only reads the headline. If you’re searching for your next role, the right skills investment depends as much on where you work as what you do. And if you’re an employer trying to find people with the right operational fundamentals in a competitive market, let’s connect.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Employee Mindset Score combines three indexes: job satisfaction, economic confidence, and AI threat perception. It’s designed to go beyond simple satisfaction surveys to capture how workers feel about their current job, their financial resilience, and their longer-term employment security. The Q2 2026 score of 66.0 represents cautious sentiment; workers feel okay about today but less certain about what comes next.
According to our Q2 2026 data, 30.8% of executives report significant AI threat concern, 2.5 times the rate of any other career stage. Executives perform the kind of work AI currently does well: pattern recognition, synthesis, judgment under uncertainty. Entry-level workers in physical, hands-on, or client-facing roles face different and, in some ways, more insulated exposure. Proximity to AI adoption, not seniority, appears to drive the anxiety.
Indeed’s analysis of Q4 2025 job postings shows business operations skills appearing in more than 70% of all U.S. postings, more than any other skill category. Customer service, administrative, and general business fundamentals are the most in-demand subcategories. Beyond that, the right skills depend heavily on geography; healthcare skills dominate in 25 states, while technology skills lead in others. Local market dynamics matter as much as national trends.
Initial claims measure how many people newly filed for unemployment in a given week. Continuing claims measure how many people are still collecting benefits, essentially how long people stay unemployed once they lose their job. When continuing claims fall while initial claims rise, as they did this week, it suggests displaced workers are moving through the system relatively quickly rather than getting stuck. That’s a healthier signal than the initial claims number alone would indicate.
