Why Tech Talent Leaves in 2025: Rethinking Total Compensation

Employee Retention
Hiring Candidates
  • January 17th, 2025
  • 3 min read

Summary

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Findings from our annual Dice Tech Salary Report uncovered an unexpected story: Despite a 1.2% increase in average tech salaries, reaching $112,521 in 2024, tech professionals are interested in leaving their jobs at unprecedented rates. Nearly half (47%) of employed tech professionals were actively seeking new positions at the end of 2024—up dramatically from 29% in 2023.

This surge in job hunting isn’t happening because of compensation alone. A deeper analysis of the 2025 Tech Salary Report reveals a widening disconnect between the benefits tech professionals value and what their employers provide. This gap helps explain why satisfaction with total compensation has hit an all-time low, with only 41% of tech professionals reporting they’re satisfied with their compensation packages.

The Training and Education Crisis

The most striking disparity appears in professional development opportunities. While 71% of tech professionals consider training and education opportunities important, only 41% have access to these benefits through their employer—a 30-percentage-point gap that represents missed opportunities for both employee growth and company innovation.

Organizations that maintain strong professional development programs can differentiate themselves in 2025. Successful approaches would include:

  • Structured certification support programs with clear advancement paths

  • Dedicated learning time during work hours

  • Mentorship programs that pair senior and junior staff

  • Regular skills assessments tied to development opportunities

  • Education stipends that allow employees to choose their learning path

Remote Work: The New Essential Benefit

Despite its undeniable favor among tech professionals, companies continued rolling back flexible work arrangements in 2024. Remote scheduling options decreased by 3 percentage points, while flexible scheduling fell by 4 points. This reduction comes at a critical time when tech professionals, especially those with families, increasingly view workplace flexibility as essential rather than optional.

While the tech job market is currently weighed in favor of employers, these rigid return-to-office policies are still likely to backfire. In tech, where finding unicorn combinations of skillsets is a common recruiting challenge, an unfavorable in-office policy could dramatically increase your time and cost to hire. Additionally, tech professionals with remote and flexible scheduling options report higher satisfaction rates and are less likely to job hunt. Naturally, this places a strong hiring advantage in the hands of employers that offer remote work options.

HR teams can address this with the following:

  1. Developing clear, sustainable remote work policies

  1. Supporting career advancement in remote settings

  1. Training managers on effective remote team leadership

  1. Investing in remote collaboration tools and practices

  1. Establishing metrics for remote work success

The Demographic Impact

Unfortunately, and unsurprisingly, benefit reductions don’t affect all tech professionals equally. Part of a strong strategy behind maintaining a diverse workforce that can meet the needs of your diverse customer base involves reflecting on how different benefits enable the acquisition and retention of certain groups.

The report reveals several key patterns:

  • Tech professionals with children are more likely to prioritize and utilize remote work options

  • Women report lower satisfaction with their total compensation (38%) compared to men (43%)

  • Professionals over 45 face unique challenges with reduced management roles and higher layoff rates

  • Early-career professionals are especially affected by cuts to training and development programs

Here are some HR strategies that can address these insights:

  • Design benefit packages that address specific demographic needs

  • Implement family-friendly policies that support work-life integration

  • Create alternative career paths beyond traditional management roles

  • Build mentorship programs that work within flatter organizational structures

Hidden Costs of Reduced Benefits

The long-term impact of benefit reductions extends far beyond immediate satisfaction metrics. As experienced employees leave, organizations lose valuable institutional knowledge that often takes years to rebuild. Innovation suffers when training opportunities diminish, as teams have fewer chances to learn new technologies and approaches. Employee engagement and productivity typically decline when benefits are cut, creating a ripple effect across projects and teams. These factors lead to increased recruitment costs as turnover rises, creating a cycle that can be difficult to break. Perhaps most significantly, organizations lose their competitive advantage in hiring as word spreads about reduced benefits, making it harder to attract top talent when critical roles open up.

Action Items for HR and Hiring Teams

  1. Review current benefit offerings against industry benchmarks

  1. Calculate and communicate the full value of your benefits package

  1. Create targeted benefit programs for different employee demographics

  1. Develop manager training programs focused on remote team management

  1. Establish clear metrics for measuring benefit program effectiveness

  1. Build regular feedback loops with employees about benefit preferences

  1. Monitor industry trends in benefit offerings and adjustments

Bringing A Resilient Benefits Strategy into 2025

The most successful organizations in 2025 will be those that recognize benefits as a strategic component of their employee value proposition. While salary growth may be modest, companies can still build compelling employment packages by focusing on the benefits that matter most to tech professionals.

For HR and hiring teams, this means taking a holistic view of compensation that goes beyond base salary. By understanding and effectively implementing comprehensive benefit packages, organizations can attract and retain top tech talent while building a more satisfied and productive workforce.

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