“What is your notice period?” That is the question that often baffles most of us. Your offer letter often depends on your notice period. At the other end, an employer racing against a project deadline, “immediately resumes scanning for joiners.“There is an institutional lag between them, often 60 to 90 days long, that is increasingly proving to be more than a mechanism. A new analysis by Foundit shows that this lag is not a transition buffer but a barrier in many cases. As immediate hiring accelerates the ability to quickly join all sectors.”
The rise of “immediate effect” recruiting
The numbers tell the story of a market that has gone beyond its conventions. According to the Foundit Insights Tracker, employer demand for immediate joiners has increased by 58 percent since 2022, nearly five times the 12 percent increase in candidate availability. In today’s world, an average job ad requires an applicant to be ready to start work immediately or within 30 days.The vocabulary used for rent has changed. Words like quick joiner, join within 15 days and urgent hiring are no longer side words but core filters in recruitment pipelines. Employers’ immediate hiring index rose to 158 in 2026 from 100 in 2022, and is now leaning toward momentum as the primary measure of employment.When time is a liability.This has created a paradox among job seekers, especially mid-level professionals. Employability, which in the past was defined by the stability of employment relations, through a durable position with mechanisms of institutional exclusion, has turned against it.Almost half of the immediate recruitment needs fall into the 3-6 years experience range, the group most likely to be under notice of 60 days or more. However, market entry requirements are within 15 to 30 days. The result is a widening gap: 27 percent of employers are demanding their candidates be able to join within 15 days, yet only 14 percent of professionals are within that time frame, a decline of 48 percent.
Instant Availability Index (Base Year: 2022 = 100)
In contrast, long-notice brackets have a surplus of talent. More than a third of candidates are locked into a 30-60 day transition, despite only a quarter of employers looking for such timelines. The imbalance is severe and consequential.What emerges is a silent filtration system. Candidates are not being rejected for lack of skills but for lack of urgency.
Departmentalization: Speed vs. Skill
The stress is most acute in areas where time is currency. IT and software, which are responsible for 34% of the immediate postings, and BFSI at 16%, are leading to immediate impact recruitment. These industries operate on a compressed project cycle, where delays translate directly into financial and competitive losses.
There is a 25% deficit in IT alone in terms of demand and availability of immediate entrants. BFSI reflects this gap. Under these limitations, organizations are reconfiguring their tuning forks for contract hiring, contract professionals, and talent pools with pre-vetted candidates to avoid the slowness of traditional notice times.Meanwhile, other industries with more transferable skills, including advertising, media, and travel, tell a different story, with an excess rather than a shortage.
The geography of urgency
Urgency is not evenly distributed. India’s metro cities, Bengaluru, Delhi/NCR, Mumbai, account for around 75% of immediate recruitment demand. These are ecosystems driven by technology, finance and consulting sectors where speed is synonymous with survival.However, paradoxically, the same metros are facing a severe shortage of immediate entrants. Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, which have slightly higher availability of immediate talent, are emerging as alternative reservoirs. This geographic reversal points to a subtle decentralization of opportunity, even as demand remains urban concentrated.
Top Cities Driving Immediate Recruitment Demand
The hidden cost of notice period
Traditionally, notice periods were designed as safeguards — to ensure continuity to organizations and responsible transitions to employees. But in a market defined by momentum, these safeguards are beginning to resemble shackles.The cost is multiple:
- Lost opportunities: Candidates miss the rolls only because they cannot join on time.
- Career stagnation: Extended notice periods delay upward mobility, often for months or years over multiple transfers.
- A loss of negotiation: Professionals on long notice periods are increasingly forced to accept counter-offers or hold responsibilities for longer than required.
- Market irrelevanceIf the transition is delayed, there is a risk of skill obsolescence in fast-growing sectors.
Indeed, time, once neutral, has become an active determinant of employment.
A system that needs to be reset.
The Foundt report points to an emerging structural paradox: a workforce tied to legacy emissions frameworks, and a market that no longer accommodates them.Companies, under pressure to deliver faster, are already adapting, reshaping hiring strategies, embracing gig models, and prioritizing agility over consistency. But for professionals, the burden of adaptation remains largely individual.The question, then, is not whether notice periods should exist, but whether they should remain in their present form.
Beyond Contract: Rethinking Career mobility
The modern career is no longer linear, it is iterative, dynamic, and increasingly time-sensitive. In such a scenario, periods of tight notices risk becoming signs of a slow period.If India’s hiring economy is truly shifting toward “immediate impact” talent, as Fundet suggests, the laws governing exits must evolve alongside entries. Otherwise, the market risks perpetuating a paradox where opportunity exists in abundance, but remains just out of reach.Finally, the most important resource in the labor market is no longer skills alone. It’s time. And for a growing number of professionals, failure to overcome it can be a major career stumbling block.