Only 36% of HR leaders ready for Gen Z hiring, report finds

NEW DELHI, INDIA — India’s hiring ecosystem is facing a structural mismatch between employers’ expectations and Gen Z talent. Even as hiring stays strong, with 88% of companies in recruitment mode, just 36% of HR leaders say they are highly prepared with strategies tailored to Gen Z hiring.
The gap highlights a major disconnect in the early talent market, according to the Unstop Talent Report 2026, which draws on surveys of over 37,000 students and 500 HR leaders conducted in January and February 2026.
The Gen Z readiness gap
The report highlights a fundamental lack of preparedness among employers for the current generation of talent. The unpreparedness is reflected in a series of mismatches between what students prioritize and what employers are currently offering.
Students across all streams rank transparent pay from day one as a critical factor, with 26% to 27% citing pay opacity as a primary red flag.
A visible growth path at the offer stage is a key demand, as 49% to 59% of students cite “no growth” as a primary reason for quitting.
Such a preparedness gap persists in engagement strategies, where HR priorities often differ from students’ preferences.
Competitions and hackathons are the most preferred activities among students (they rank 1st on the list of desired activities, with cited rates of 42% to 44%).
Still, HR leaders invest only 14% of their engagement in it, compared to 26% in guest lectures. Disconnects can also be observed in workplace preferences for flexibility: only 28% to 29% of students across all streams desire a fully in-office position, highlighting a strong need for a hybrid or flexible working arrangement that is not fully satisfied by current hiring practices.
A crisis of access and opportunity
The report paints a bleak picture of a stratified employment situation in which admission to campuses determines a student’s employment prospects.
The proportion of the 2026 graduating class that is not placed is nonetheless substantial: business school students make up 74% of the students, undergraduate students make up 84% of the students, and engineering students make up 85% of the students, yet still have not been placed.
The data reveal that students on campuses visited by more than 150 companies have a 2.9 times higher probability of being placed than those on campuses with fewer than 30 companies.
This disparity in access undermines confidence in the hiring ecosystem itself: only 37% of students at low-access campuses trust the system, compared with 55% at high-access campuses.
Nevertheless, the talent pool is huge, underutilized, and available to alternative sources. The prevailing trend, with 94% to 96% of students opting for off-campus hiring, implies that campus has ceased being the limit for recruiting and has become a foundation.
This is coupled with a strong desire for learning and growth over immediate compensation, with 61% to 65% of students citing learning as their primary motivator for a first role.
The report concludes that to bridge this gap, companies must move beyond reliance on a few premier campuses and build structured, skills-first pipelines that reach the vast majority of students who are ready and willing to work.

Independent




