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Recent Blog Posts

Public schools in the U.S. swing between chaos and quiet.  Schools don’t staff evenly throughout the year. Hiring runs on the academic calendar: districts start posting roles in late winter, fill most positions in late spring and early summer to be ready for August/September, then do another wave in late summer/early fall to cover last-minute gaps once enrollment

TL;DR  Contract staffing in 2026 has become a planned workforce strategy that helps companies control labor costs, hire faster, access specialized skills, and stay flexible in uncertain markets. Employers are using shorter, more tightly scoped contracts for higher-skill roles, while remote work has widened the talent pool and increased competition. At the same time, compliance

The phrase “contract staffing” gets thrown around like everyone means the same thing. They don’t.  Ask five hiring managers what it means, and you’ll get five different answers. One thinks temporary workers. Another assumes outsourcing. A third pictures consultants on defined projects. When you misidentify which model you’re using, budgets blow up and delivery timelines slip.  This article breaks down five workforce models that

Temporary staffing has become a structural part of how construction firms operate. Labor volatility, project-based work, and tighter compliance expectations have pushed many companies to rely on temporary and contract staffing well beyond peak season coverage.  For hiring managers and owners, the question is no longer whether temporary staffing is expensive. The real question is where

Most contract staffing problems do not start with poor hiring. They start with unclear accountability.  A bill rate looks competitive. Roles get filled quickly. Then attendance slips, supervisors get pulled into daily triage, and HR starts asking compliance questions that should have been resolved upfront.  Choosing a contract staffing agency determines how often those issues occur and how

A career shift from a full-time role to contract work usually doesn’t start with dissatisfaction. It starts with opportunity.  A high-impact project opens up. A team needs immediate expertise. The timeline is tight, and leadership doesn’t have the luxury of a long hiring cycle. Instead of posting a full-time role, they fund a contract position.  The offer looks attractive: higher pay, faster

Data center construction no longer behaves like standard commercial work. Schedules are shorter, systems are denser, and tolerance for delay is minimal. Across the country, especially in Virginia, builders are being asked to deliver power-heavy, redundancy-driven facilities on timelines that leave little room for workforce misalignment.  That pressure is exposing a weakness in traditional construction hiring models. Permanent headcounts grow too

Contract jobs in 2026 are no longer defined by flexibility alone. They are defined by necessity.  Across the U.S., employers are using contract talent to solve problems they cannot defer: regulatory deadlines, production bottlenecks, system migrations, patient coverage, and security exposure. Permanent hiring remains selective. Work does not slow down. The gap is filled by contractors who can step in

If your company is looking to grow with flexibility, or if you’re a tech professional browsing job boards, understanding how to hire for, or secure, IT contract jobs can make all the difference. This post breaks down what “contracting” really means in today’s labor market, why companies like PeopleSolutions leverage it, and best practices whether you’re hiring or applying.  Why Contract Work Is a Big