Is Software, IT & Cybersecurity a Good Job Market in Kansas City, MO-KS?
Produced by Callings.ai on May 10, 2026
Executive Verdict
Market rating: competitive | Confidence: Medium
Kansas City looks competitive rather than broken for Software, IT & Cybersecurity over the next 3-6 months. Missouri's Software, IT & Cybersecurity openings were up 21.7% year-over-year in April 2026 while statewide employment in the field was essentially flat, which usually means more requisitions are circulating without a broad hiring boom.[6][7] Locally, Kansas City unemployment was 4.2% in February 2026, but metro information employment was down 5.4% year-over-year in March and professional and business services was down 1.6%, so employers are still selective.[8][4][9] The Kansas City Fed also reports little evidence of large-scale AI-driven job displacement as of April 2026, so the issue is fit and specialization more than wholesale replacement.[10]
Best positioned: The best odds right now belong to mid-career engineers, infrastructure/cloud candidates, and security practitioners who match local stacks such as Python, Java, C#, SQL, AWS, and can work on-site or hybrid.[5][11][12]
Main caution: The biggest mistake is assuming a high posted pay band means easy access; only about 15% of sampled roles are entry-level and only about 20% are remote.[13][5][11]
What Changed Recently
- Missouri postings for Software, IT & Cybersecurity rose 21.7% year-over-year by April 2026, while statewide employment in the occupation stayed essentially flat.[6][7]: That usually means employers are backfilling or hiring selectively, not expanding teams indiscriminately.
- Kansas City's information sector employment fell 5.4% year-over-year in March 2026, and professional and business services fell 1.6%.[4][9]: Many tech jobs sit inside those sectors, so you should expect tighter approval cycles and more role-specific screening.
- Oracle America filed a March 31, 2026 WARN notice affecting 539 employees at its Kansas City campus for layoffs scheduled between May 26 and June 1, 2026.[1]: That does not define the whole market, but it is a real local reminder that large employers can still cut even when openings exist.
- Nationally, unemployment was 4.3% in April 2026, CPI was up 3.1% year-over-year in March, and average hourly earnings were up 3.6% year-over-year in April.[14][15][16]: For Kansas City tech seekers, that points to a labor market that is still functioning, but one where employers watch budgets closely and candidates need salary asks tied to business value, not just inflation.
- The Kansas City Fed said in April 2026 that there is little evidence of large-scale AI job displacement in the local market.[10]: The near-term advantage goes to people who can use AI tools productively in engineering, IT, or security work, not just talk about AI in the abstract.
What This Means for You
Entry-Level Candidates
Difficulty: High. Only about 15% of sampled openings are entry-level, and postings that state an education requirement usually ask for a bachelor's degree.[11][23]
Best target: Target onsite or hybrid help desk, QA, junior sysadmin, junior developer, and security-support roles where you can prove Python, SQL, Git, or AWS basics quickly.
Biggest mistake: Applying like a generalist to remote-only software engineer jobs without a portfolio, homelab, or internship-quality proof of work.
Next step: Build one proof bundle for a single lane in the next 30 days: a repo, a short write-up, and a resume mapped directly to the stack you want.
Mid-Career Candidates
Difficulty: Moderate. The local mix favors experienced hiring, with about 45% of roles at mid level and about 35% at senior.[11]
Best target: Focus on mid-level software engineering, cloud/infrastructure, IAM, security engineering, and DevOps/SRE-style roles tied to delivery, uptime, migration, or risk reduction.
Biggest mistake: Sending one resume for both product engineering and enterprise IT/security work when employers are screening for narrower fit.
Next step: Create separate resume versions for application engineering and platform/security work, each with quantified delivery, automation, incident, or migration results.
Career Switchers
Difficulty: High but possible through narrower bridges. Local demand is still skill-first and bachelor's-heavy in postings that specify education, and the visible certification signal is selective rather than broad.[23][24][12]
Best target: Aim for support-to-sysadmin, QA-to-automation, compliance-to-security-operations, or customer-facing technical roles rather than jumping straight to senior software engineering.
Biggest mistake: Leading with certificates alone instead of showing applied work, documentation, troubleshooting, or automation proof.
Next step: Pick one transition lane and build evidence for it: an AWS or Windows/Linux admin lab, an IAM workflow project, a test automation suite, or a small SOC-style detection/playbook portfolio.
Salary Reality
high pay highly concentrated
Observed local postings center on about $113k to $154k, with a broader 25th-75th band of about $85k to $180k.[13] As a directional cross-check, Missouri's mean offered salary on new Software, IT & Cybersecurity openings was about $120,692 in April 2026, while the national mean offered salary was about $124,141.[17] Government wage data for the national Computer and Mathematical occupations group is broader and older, but it still shows a high-pay field: $116,810 mean pay, $146,650 median, $105,850 at the 25th percentile, and $180,110 at the 75th percentile.[18][19][20][21]
Kansas City can still pay well for this category, especially once you move past entry level. The local band lines up more with experienced engineering, infrastructure, and security work than with true trainee roles.
The payoff is offset by selectivity. Only about 15% of sampled roles are entry-level, about 60% are on-site, and the typical active posting has been open around 28 days, which suggests employers have options and do not need to relax requirements quickly.[5][11][22]
Best-paying path: The strongest pay tends to sit in senior software and security tracks, not generalist support. In the local sample, the top of the common band reaches about $180k, while only about 5% of roles are lead+.[13][11]
Caution: Do not overread the top end of the band. Posted ranges often reflect specialized stacks, leadership scope, or employers fishing for hard-to-find talent, and the local posting sample is directional rather than a census of every offer in the metro.
Where the Opportunities Are Concentrated
Most real opportunity is concentrated in core tech and IT employers rather than evenly spread across the metro. In the local posting sample, about 50% of openings came from technology companies and about 25% from information technology employers, with smaller pockets in healthcare technology, financial services, and software development.[32] Hiring is also fragmented across employers rather than dominated by one name, which is helpful if one company freezes hiring but means you need a wider employer list.[3] The role mix favors experienced practitioners. About 45% of sampled openings are mid-level and about 35% are senior, versus about 15% entry-level.[11] On work setting, about 60% of roles are on-site and about 20% hybrid, so local availability matters more here than in remote-first tech markets.[5] Skill demand clusters around general engineering and platform work: Python appears in about 20% of postings, Java, C#, and SQL in about 15% each, with AWS, JavaScript, Git, and C++ appearing in about 10% bands.[12] That pattern points to practical application development, enterprise platforms, cloud/infrastructure, and security-adjacent engineering more than pure research or clearly data-first roles.
- Core software engineering (high): Best fit for candidates with Python, Java, C#, SQL, and Git who can show shipped code, internal tooling, or enterprise delivery.
- Cloud / infrastructure / DevOps (high): A strong lane for candidates who pair AWS with automation, systems depth, or reliability-focused project evidence.
- Cybersecurity / IAM / security operations (moderate): Viable but narrower; the recurring local credential signal is CISSP, which suggests employers value proven security depth more than beginner certifications.[24]
- Entry-level generalist tech roles (limited): This lane exists, but the share is smaller and usually tied to local-presence employers rather than flexible remote hiring.
Where to focus: Prioritize mid-level onsite or hybrid roles in technology, IT services, healthcare-tech, and financial services employers, and tailor by lane instead of marketing yourself as open to anything in tech.
Skills and Credentials Worth Pursuing
- Python (premium): Python is the single most common hard skill in the local sample at about 20% of postings, so it travels across application, automation, testing, and security workflows.[12]
- Java or C# (table stakes): Java and C# each appear in about 15% of local postings, making them core enterprise stacks rather than niche bets.[12]
- SQL (table stakes): SQL shows up in about 15% of postings and is one of the clearest bridge skills across app dev, QA, support engineering, and security tooling.[12]
- AWS / cloud infrastructure (differentiator): AWS appears in about 10% of local postings, and national employer guidance puts cloud infrastructure and cybersecurity among the skills employers pay a premium for.[12][25]
- Git (table stakes): Git appears in about 10% of local postings; it is basic proof that you can work in team delivery, not just solo projects.[12]
- CISSP (premium): CISSP is the most frequently named certification in the local sample, though still only about 5% of postings, which makes it a selective advantage rather than a blanket requirement.[24]
- AI-assisted development and automation literacy (differentiator): The Kansas City Fed sees little evidence of large-scale AI displacement locally, but Robert Half says 84% of employers are willing to pay a premium for AI, machine learning, and cybersecurity specialization.[10][25]
Adjacent Roles to Consider
- Technical Product Manager (pivot): A strong pivot for senior engineers, SREs, or security practitioners who already translate business needs into shipped work.
- Business Systems Analyst / ERP Analyst (bridge): A practical bridge for support, sysadmin, QA, or developer candidates who know how systems map to real business workflows.
- Solutions Consultant / Sales Engineer (both): A good move for technical people who are strong in demos, troubleshooting, onboarding, and customer conversations.
- GRC / IT Compliance Analyst (bridge): A reasonable bridge for IT and security-adjacent candidates who understand controls, access, audit trails, and regulated environments.
30 / 60 / 90-Day Plan
First 30 Days
- Split your resume into two versions: one for software/application roles and one for infrastructure/security roles, with different keywords and outcome metrics.
- Build a target list of local employers across technology, IT services, healthcare-tech, and financial services instead of only chasing national remote roles.
- Create one polished proof artifact tied to your lane: a deployed app, an automation script set, a cloud architecture diagram with IaC, or a security detection/playbook write-up.
- Reset your search filters to include on-site and hybrid work, because local demand is much more weighted there than in remote-only hiring.
Days 31-60
- Apply in tighter batches to roles posted within the last month, and track response rates separately for software, infrastructure, and security titles.
- Run two interview drills per week: one technical screen tied to your stack and one scenario round focused on incidents, delivery tradeoffs, migrations, or stakeholder communication.
- If you are security-leaning, decide now whether CISSP is realistic in the next cycle; if not, show equivalent depth through architecture, controls, or incident evidence.
- If you are infrastructure-leaning, add one cloud proof point that shows AWS plus automation rather than AWS plus multiple-choice exam prep.
Days 61-90
- If response rates stay weak, widen your title set to include QA automation, IAM, platform engineer, application support engineer, business systems analyst, or solutions consultant roles.
- Use your best artifact to ask for warm introductions from local recruiters and former colleagues instead of relying only on cold applications.
- Review every rejection for pattern: stack mismatch, seniority mismatch, or work-arrangement mismatch, then cut one entire lane that is wasting your time.
- Negotiate for the full package, not just base pay: scope, bonus, flexibility, training budget, and promotion path matter in a selective market.
Methodology and Confidence
This April 2026 report was generated on May 10, 2026. Latest direct national data: April 2026. Latest direct Kansas City, MO-KS data: May 2026.
Confidence: Overall confidence: Medium. The local picture is usable, but some conclusions still rely on category-level inference and state-level proxy data where metro occupation data is not published.
Limitations
- This report combines April 2026 occupation signals with metro labor-market context that runs through March 2026 and a metro unemployment reading from February 2026, so the local picture is slightly staggered across releases.[8][27][4][9][26]
- Several year-over-year government changes used here are preliminary, including Missouri unemployment and employment measures and Kansas City nonfarm, information, and professional and business services employment, so small moves can be revised later.[28][29][30][27][4][9]
- Statewide labor data was used as a proxy where metro-level occupation data is not published, especially for Missouri-wide Software, IT & Cybersecurity employment, openings, and offered salary; Kansas City may be stronger or weaker than the state average.[7][6][17]
- The Callings.ai job database is a partial, deduplicated sample of online postings, so it is better for spotting leading employer names, skill patterns, salary bands, and work-arrangement mix than for measuring exact market size or exact shares.[26][31][13][5][12]
- This category combines software engineering, enterprise IT, and cybersecurity roles, and the current local sample skews toward mid-level and senior hiring, so entry-level conditions are harder than the overall category headline may suggest.[11]
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