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Miami Job Market Report

Miami Job Market Report

Written by: Inception Point Ai
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Welcome to "Miami Job Market Report," your ultimate source for the latest insights and trends in the Miami employment landscape. Each episode dives deep into key sectors, emerging opportunities, and expert analysis to help job seekers, employers, and industry professionals stay ahead. Tune in for up-to-date information on job growth, the impact of economic changes, and career advice specific to Miami. Whether you're looking to advance your career or understand the local job market better, "Miami Job Market Report" is your go-to podcast for all things employment in the Magic City. Listen now and unlock the secrets to navigating one of the country's most dynamic job markets.

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Episodes
  • Miami's Resilient Job Market: Navigating National Softness
    Jan 19 2026
    Miami's job market reflects a stabilizing yet cautious landscape amid national slowdowns, with Miami-Dade County's unemployment rate at 3.2 percent in November 2025, the highest in nearly four years but still the lowest in Florida according to Miami Today News. Florida's statewide rate rose to 4.2 percent that month per FloridaCommerce, while national figures hovered at 4.6 percent from Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Employment shows resilience, with ADP reporting 41,000 U.S. private jobs added in December 2025, led by education, health services, leisure, and hospitality, though professional services declined. Major industries include tourism, healthcare, real estate, finance, and tech, with key employers like Miami Dade College seeing 5.5 percent year-over-year credit hour growth, Keiser University excelling in nursing, cybersecurity, and business, and county operations such as Miami-Dade Fire Rescue. Growing sectors encompass AI, data analytics highlighted at BattleFin Miami 2026, medical devices, and higher education despite enrollment pressures and institutional consolidations noted in JobStars analysis. Trends indicate sputtering hiring and rising layoffs nationally, with Moody's Analytics warning 22 states near recession, though Miami bucks some weakness. Recent developments feature Metromover ridership up 12 percent year-over-year, FIFA World Cup 2026 preparations boosting creative jobs, and stabilized home insurance rates. Seasonal patterns favor tourism peaks in winter, easing summer lulls. Commuting leans toward public transit gains, while government initiatives include Miami-Dade's mobility fee reviews for neighborhood reinvestment and financial audits. The market evolves toward data-driven roles and service stability amid K-shaped recovery.

    Data gaps persist on precise 2026 Miami-specific stats and post-December unemployment.

    Key findings: Miami outperforms state and national averages with tourism and education anchors, but watch national softening.

    Current openings: Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Trades/Manual Labor positions closing January 28, 2026 via Miami-Dade jobs site; higher education roles in nursing and cybersecurity at Keiser University; administrative jobs at Miami Dade College.

    Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more insights. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    3 mins
  • Miami's Resilient Job Market Amid Broader Shifts - Competitive Openings in Healthcare, Tech, and Construction
    Jan 16 2026
    Miami's job market remains robust amid Florida's broader economic shifts, with the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach metro area posting the state's lowest unemployment rate at 4.1% in November 2025, up from 2.9% a year prior, according to the Florida Department of Commerce. This edges above full employment but trails the national rate of 4.6%, reflecting steady demand despite statewide pressures like construction job losses of 4,600 over the year. Employment has grown in education and health services by 49,000 jobs and trade, transportation, and utilities by 18,300, while manufacturing dipped by 1,700.

    Major industries include tourism, finance, real estate, healthcare, technology, and construction, with key employers like hospital networks, fintech firms, and developers driving hiring. Growing sectors encompass healthcare, IT, and logistics, fueled by population influx and no state income tax. Trends show resilient job addition in services offsetting construction slowdowns, though national forecasts from Associated Builders and Contractors predict the industry needs 349,000 new workers in 2026 amid retirements and modest spending growth. Recent developments feature over 3,600 layoff notices since November 2025, mostly slated for 2026 in manufacturing and retail, per state reports. Seasonal patterns tie to tourism peaks in winter, boosting hospitality, while commuting trends favor short drives in expanding suburbs with hybrid work rising post-pandemic. Government initiatives are limited in data, but Florida's workforce programs support apprenticeships in trades. The market has evolved from pandemic recovery to balanced growth, though data gaps exist on Miami-specific 2026 projections and precise employer expansions.

    Key findings highlight a competitive market favoring skilled workers in health and tech, with unemployment low but rising slightly. Current openings include registered nurse at Miami hospital networks, software engineer for fintech startups, and construction project manager amid infrastructure needs.

    Thank you for tuning in, listeners, and remember to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    3 mins
  • Miami's Job Market Reflects National Trends: Selective Hiring, Tech Roles, and Affordability Gaps
    Jan 12 2026
    Miami's job market reflects a national landscape of superficial stability amid underlying pressures, with U.S. unemployment at 4.4 percent according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics December report. Employment growth slowed to 50,000 jobs nationwide, mirroring 2025's average of 49,000 per the same source, while local data shows Miami-Dade's job market index at 5.8 in U.S. News and World Report rankings. Major industries include tourism, retail with 312,000 salespeople statewide at $14.89 median hourly wage per United Way ALICE data, customer service, tech, and finance; key employers like Walmart adapt by dropping degree requirements. Growing sectors encompass AI-driven roles demanding problem-solving and quick tech learning skills, as Resume.org surveys note 92 percent of companies plan aggressive 2026 hiring despite 55 percent expecting AI-fueled layoffs. Trends indicate selective rebalancing toward revenue-focused functions, with college-educated workers facing rising unemployment per Moody's Analytics, and ALICE households—asset-limited income-constrained employed—at 35 percent in nearby Palm Beach County per United Way 2023 figures, highlighting affordability gaps where a single adult needs $21 hourly for basics.

    Recent developments feature the National ALICE Summit in Miami Beach drawing 700 attendees to address working poor struggles, alongside port congestion delaying manufacturing per Global Trade Magazine. No clear seasonal patterns emerge, though tourism peaks seasonally; commuting averages 30 minutes in areas like nearby Alafaya per U.S. News. Government initiatives under Trump include $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities purchases to cut rates below 6 percent and boost housing per Penn Mutual and Funds Society reports. Market evolution shows a cooling yet resilient environment with JOLTS openings at 7.15 million nationally, stable layoffs, and AI productivity gains pressuring wages.

    Data gaps persist on precise Miami unemployment and 2026 projections. Key findings: Selective hiring favors skilled tech roles amid AI shifts, but affordability challenges many workers. Current openings include Private Wealth Solutions in alternative investments via Refresh Miami, Finance Manager at a law firm, and tech positions in Miami's ecosystem dashboard.

    Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
    Show More Show Less
    3 mins
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