The Great Talent Decentralisation
The long-held belief that high-value tech jobs are exclusive to cities like Bengaluru, Mumbai, or Delhi NCR is being challenged. According to a recent report from Indeed, while metros still dominate AI recruitment, about one in four employers now view
Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities as emerging hiring destinations. This trend is driven by a simple reality: companies are seeking skilled talent that is more stable and readily available, while many professionals prefer building careers closer to home. The post-pandemic normalisation of remote and hybrid work has built the infrastructure for this decentralisation, allowing firms to tap into a wider talent pool without demanding relocation. This means for the first time, a fresher's postcode matters less than their portfolio, creating a more level playing field based on skills rather than location.
India's New AI Frontiers
So, where is this new growth happening? Recent data points to a number of non-metro cities becoming hotspots for AI talent and hiring. A July 2026 report identified Ahmedabad and Chandigarh as fast-growing AI hiring centres, with a significant percentage of employers in each city reporting a rise in AI job postings. Other reports highlight a broader geographic spread of AI upskilling and opportunities, with cities like Jaipur, Indore, Coimbatore, Lucknow, Patna, and Nagpur showing a notable increase in AI learners. Even cities like Vijayawada are seeing strong growth in AI engineering hiring. This isn't just a handful of isolated cases; it's a pattern. Over 45% of all Indian startups now originate from Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, many of them in the tech sector, fostering local ecosystems of innovation.
Beyond High-End Coding: The New AI Jobs
When people think of AI jobs, they often imagine complex roles in research and development. While strategic functions like AI governance and R&D largely remain in metro cities, a different and broader set of opportunities is flourishing elsewhere. Companies are becoming more flexible about hiring locations for roles in data operations, analytics, AI implementation, and infrastructure maintenance. Many entry-level AI jobs no longer require a deep engineering background. Roles like data annotation, AI model testing, and conversational AI design are becoming common. Furthermore, almost half of all AI-enabled roles are now outside of traditional tech tracks, appearing in functions like marketing, HR, finance, and operations. This signifies that AI skills are becoming a universal requirement, much like digital literacy was a decade ago.
How Freshers Can Seize the Opportunity
For fresh graduates in smaller cities, this trend is a golden opportunity, but it requires a proactive approach. The demand for AI skills is outpacing supply, so upskilling is non-negotiable. Employers now prioritise practical skills over just degrees. Freshers should focus on building a strong portfolio with hands-on projects and recognised certifications. Key skills in demand include prompt engineering, data literacy, and familiarity with AI tools for automation and productivity. However, human-centric skills are becoming more valuable, not less. AI can't replicate communication, critical thinking, persuasion, or real-world judgment. Professionals who learn to partner with AI, using it as a tool to automate repetitive tasks and enhance their own capabilities, will have a significant competitive edge.
















