24-role jobs roundup
- Technical.ly published a jobs roundup this week listing 24 open roles described as 'moonshot energy' hiring. - The piece compiles 24 hiring opportunities across startups and smaller firms for this week. - It signals pockets of targeted hiring persist despite broader softness in white-collar recruitment. (technical.ly/workforce/this-week-in-jobs-harness-the-moonshot-energy-with-these-24-open-roles)
Technical.ly’s latest jobs roundup listed 24 open roles this week, pointing readers to active hiring at startups and smaller firms even as broader office hiring stays subdued. (technical.ly) The roundup was published Tuesday, April 21, and is part of Technical.ly’s weekly “This Week in Jobs” newsletter, which the company says lands in subscribers’ inboxes every Tuesday at 8 a.m. (technical.ly 1) (technical.ly 2) Technical.ly framed this week’s list around “moonshot energy,” borrowing the Apollo 16 anniversary as a hook for a set of roles aimed at people looking for startup and innovation work. The outlet said the 24 openings came from younger companies and other smaller employers rather than the biggest tech firms. (technical.ly) That curation arrives in a labor market where hiring has slowed. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said job openings were 6.882 million in February 2026, while hires fell to 4.8 million. (bls.gov 1) (bls.gov 2) Federal Reserve contacts described a similarly cautious backdrop in April. The Beige Book said employment grew only slightly across districts, with several business contacts reporting flat staffing levels or stable head counts. (federalreserve.gov 1) (federalreserve.gov 2) The Bureau of Labor Statistics also said the February job-openings rate fell for establishments with 1 to 9 employees, a reminder that small-company hiring is uneven even when openings remain available. That makes hand-picked lists like Technical.ly’s more notable for job seekers targeting startup work. (bls.gov) (technical.ly) The longer-term picture is still mixed. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects total U.S. employment will increase by 5.2 million from 2024 to 2034, with growth led mainly by healthcare and social assistance rather than the startup-heavy office sectors that dominate many white-collar job searches. (bls.gov) For now, the signal from Technical.ly’s list is narrower than a labor-market rebound: some employers are still hiring, and they are advertising role by role. (technical.ly)