Bengaluru, July 15: On World Youth Skills Day, Apna, India’s leading early-career talent platform, today unveiled the Apna AI Readiness Pulse 2026, an analysis of AI-related skill signals on candidate profiles and AI-related job postings across its platform. The findings indicate that India’s young workforce is increasingly showcasing AI-related skills early in its career journey, pointing to a broader shift in how candidates are preparing for an AI-led economy.

Young professionals are increasingly treating AI as an employability skillAIskill mentions on candidate profiles grew by nearly 18% year-on-year in Q1 FY27. The shift is visible across different levels of education. In Q1 FY27, postgraduate profiles recorded an approximately 27% year-on-year increase in AIskill mentions, while graduate profiles saw a 15.7% increase.

AI-related skills are also beginning to appear across diploma and ITI profiles, although from a smaller base, indicating that interest in AI is extending beyond graduate and postgraduate talent pools.

The trend is particularly pronounced among those entering the workforce. The share of fresher profiles mentioning AI-related skills increased 20%YoY. In comparison, the share among experienced professionals increased and saw an 11% rise.

AI is also moving beyond its association with software and specialist technology roles. In Q1 FY27, Data Science & Analytics and Software Engineering recorded the highest AIskill penetration, at 66.6% and 28.5%, respectively. However, some of the strongest year-on-year growth came from non-coding, business and creative functions.

The share of Product Management profiles mentioning AI skills increased from 28.57% in Q1 FY26 to 50% in Q1 FY27, representing a 75% year-on-year increase. Advertising and Communication recorded a 42% increase, while Content, Editorial and Journalism and Research and Development each grew by 40%. Marketing, Brand and Digital Marketing followed with 36% growth. The findings indicate that AI is becoming an increasingly relevant workplace capability across functions rather than remaining confined to specialist technical roles.

Employer demand is rising alongside this shift. AI-related job postings on Apna more than doubled between FY25 and FY26, with momentum continuing into FY27. In Q1 FY27, AI-related job postings saw an 112% YoY reflecting sustained growth in employer demand. As organisations integrate AI more deeply into everyday operations, the ability to work effectively with AI is likely to become relevant across a wider range of roles.

India’s AI talent landscape is also becoming more geographically distributed. Tier-1 cities continue to record the highest share of candidate profiles mentioning AI-related skills,a 14% YoY rise. However, growth was faster outside the largest urban centres. AIskill mentions among Tier-2 profiles increase20% YoY. Among Tier-2 cities analysed, Lucknow recorded 54% year-on-year growth, followed by Bhopal at 42% and Jaipur at 31%. Several Tier-1 cities also showed strong momentum, led by Ahmedabad at 46%.

Commenting on the findings, Kartik Narayan, CEO, Apna, said, “The important story is not that AI is creating a separate class of jobs. It is that AI is becoming part of the grammar of work itself. India is already the world’s second-largest consumer of Generative AI, but our real opportunity lies in how we are using it not merely to automate tasks, but to upgrade ourselves. Across functions, education levels, experience cohorts and cities, we are seeing young Indians treat AI literacy much as an earlier generation embraced digital literacy: as a foundational skill for participating in the modern economy.

India‘s challenge now is to ensure this transformation is inclusive. AI capability cannot remain the privilege of a narrow, urban or technically trained workforce. When access to AI learning, practice and application is democratised, technology becomes an employability equaliser rather than another divide. In the long run, competitive advantage will belong not to those who simply know about AI, but to those who can apply it with judgement, solve real-world problems, adapt continuously and create value through their work”

As India accelerates its transition towards an AI-led economy, the Apna AI Readiness Pulse 2026 suggests that the next phase of workforce transformation will be shaped not only by how AI changes jobs, but also by how early individuals begin developing the ability to work alongside it. The opportunity is no longer limited to learning about AI; it lies in making its meaningful and responsible application a core part of career readiness.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *