I spend a lot of time talking with leaders who are building and running data centers across North America. What I’m hearing lately is remarkably consistent. The demand signals are strong — stronger than ever, in fact. AI workloads are accelerating. Cloud adoption isn’t slowing. New facilities are being announced in markets that weren’t even on the data center map a few years ago.
And yet, beneath the data center boom, there’s a growing unease.
Executives aren’t asking whether they should invest in data centers. They’re asking a harder question: How do we sustain this growth when the people we need simply aren’t there yet?
At Experis, we work with organizations at every stage of the data center lifecycle, and what we’re seeing is clear. Infrastructure can be financed, land can be acquired and power can be negotiated. But without an intentional, long-term workforce strategy, even the most ambitious data center investments are at risk. Sustainable growth in this market starts, and ends, with people.
The Workforce Challenge Behind the Data Center Boom
Data centers have become the backbone of modern business in the U.S. and Canada. They power AI innovation, cloud platforms, digital services and the always-on experiences customers now expect.
As a result, data center growth is accelerating at an unprecedented pace:
Global data center capacity is projected to grow at roughly 15% annually, and even that pace may struggle to keep up with AI-driven demand.
Global data center energy usage is expected to increase by 50% by 2027, with projections showing demand could surge by more than 165% by the end of the decade.
To support generative AI alone, approximately 10 gigawatts of new IT load is being added globally.
This rapid growth is no longer limited to traditional hubs like Northern Virginia or Dallas. According to Cushman & Wakefield, while those established markets remain critical, new facilities are increasingly being developed in emerging and rural regions — from Pennsylvania and the Carolinas to Texas, Oregon, Canada and the Midwest — where land and power are more readily available.
From a workforce perspective, that shift changes everything.
Why Traditional Hiring Models Are Falling Short
As data center footprints expand geographically, competition for specialized talent intensifies. The roles required to design, build, operate and optimize these facilities demand highly specific skills tied to uptime, resilience, safety, sustainability, energy efficiency and regulatory compliance.
The challenge is that most local labor markets don’t have ready-made data center talent. In the U.S. alone, data center growth helped create an estimated 4.7 million jobs between 2017 and 2023 (available only in English). Today, those numbers are accelerating even faster across North America.
In many regions, organizations are discovering that recruiting alone isn’t enough. Traditional staffing and hiring models designed to fill individual roles quickly struggle when scale, speed and specialization all collide. When every new facility requires dozens or hundreds of skilled workers, employers must build talent pipelines, not just source from them.
What Sustainable Data Center Talent Really Requires
Continued data center growth depends on workforce strategies that are as intentional and long-term as the infrastructure investments themselves. Isolated hiring efforts, even when aggressive, rarely deliver lasting results.
What’s required instead is an end-to-end approach that supports the entire data center lifecycle. This includes everything from building and commissioning facilities to running, modernizing and optimizing operations over time.
That kind of strategy demands a workforce partner who can:
- Support talent needs across design, construction, operations and optimization
- Source specialized IT, digital and operational roles at scale
- Develop new talent through training and mentorship programs
- Create repeatable, scalable workforce models that can flex with expansion
How Experis Enables Sustainable Data Center Growth
Experis plays a lead role in helping data center organizations solve complex workforce challenges across IT and digital operations. Our expertise spans the systems and services that keep modern data centers running reliably, securely and at scale with sustainable talent pipelines.
Core Data Center Capabilities
Management & Operations — We support the day-to-day disciplines that keep environments stable and resilient, including:
- Monitoring and alerting to ensure uptime
- Audit trails and change management for compliance and control
- Trouble ticket management and root-cause analysis
- Systems management and patch updates to reduce risk and disruption
Networking — Data center performance depends on fast, reliable connectivity. Experis supports:
- High-performance LAN, WAN and MAN environments
- Networks that operate seamlessly within the data center and connect it to the broader enterprise
Computing — We help organizations maintain continuity while modernizing infrastructure by supporting:
- Legacy environments, including mainframes
- Modern architectures such as open systems, clusters and virtualized or partitioned resources
Storage — At the heart of every data center is data. Our storage expertise focuses on:
- Data storage, management and retrieval
- Strategies that enable delivery of “live” and “near-live” data
- Reliable access that meets enterprise performance and availability expectations
Extending Impact Through Partnership with Manpower Engineering
While Experis leads across IT and digital operations, sustainable data center growth also depends on the facilities and engineering expertise that supports physical infrastructure from buildout through steady-state operations.
This is where our sister company, Manpower Engineering, extends and complements Experis’ capabilities.
Facilities & Engineering Talent Capabilities
- Construction and civil engineering professionals who support site development, structural integrity and large-scale builds
- Mechanical, electrical and HVAC specialists essential for power distribution, cooling systems and energy efficiency
- Facilities and maintenance talent responsible for uptime, reliability and continuous optimization once data centers are operational
- Project-based and scalable staffing models that enable rapid ramp-up without compromising quality, safety or compliance
Proof in Action: Building a Workforce for Data Centers
Workforce strategy only matters if it delivers real results at scale. The following case study shows how Experis put this approach into action, helping a major cloud provider overcome talent shortages, accelerate readiness and build a repeatable workforce model in markets where traditional hiring simply couldn’t keep up.
Business Challenge
A major cloud provider was building 16 new data centers across the U.S. and needed to hire 500 data center technicians, critical environment engineers and asset and logistics specialists. However, the selected locations lacked sustainable talent pools to support ongoing hiring needs. Their existing year-long data center academy was not producing talent at the speed or consistency required.
Solution
We launched an accelerated data center mentorship program, combining classroom learning, scenario-based role play and onsite guidance. Participants worked alongside our data center leads, handling real operational tickets to build job-ready skills. The program expands access to IT careers for emerging talent who may not have previously seen a path into the field.
Results
- Achieved a 100% cohort-to-FTE conversion rate, surpassing the 90% SLA.
- Expanded into new regions based on proven success and repeatable scalability.
- Created a new, inclusive talent pathway into data center careers for individuals traditionally overlooked for these roles.
Powering the Data Center Boom Through Sustainable Talent
Organizations that succeed in the next phase of the data center boom will treat workforce sustainability as a growth lever. Experis helps North American data center leaders scale faster, reduce workforce risk and build talent pipelines that last.
Contact us to start building the sustainable workforce your data centers demand.
About the Author
Julie Loucks
Head of Vertical Strategy, IT, Tech and Communications, ManpowerGroup North America.


