U.S. tech employers continue to face a hiring paradox. For one, open roles in engineering and technical functions remain unfilled longer than business leaders would like. On the other hand, a large pool of qualified international talent remains under-connected to the U.S. market, even when candidates have relevant experience, recognized credentials, and viable work authorization pathways.
The result is not simply inconvenience. Prolonged vacancies affect product delivery, planning accuracy, and operational resilience. When critical roles remain open, teams compensate by reallocating work, extending cycles, and delaying execution. Over time, the “cost of empty seats” becomes visible in roadmaps, reliability, and the ability to respond to shifting market demands.
This gap has drawn attention from founders building new infrastructure for cross-border hiring. Anitha Sri Maheswaran, who has led companies in software and services, created JackyBa to address a specific pain point: employers and candidates often lose weeks or months navigating uncertainty that could have been clarified earlier.
Why Employers Struggle to Reach Global Talent
Many international professionals bring strong technical skills and recognized training. Many hold advanced degrees or certifications aligned with U.S. hiring needs. Some also qualify for established visa routes such as H-1B transfers, STEM OPT, TN, E-3, or O-1.
Even so, many remain functionally invisible to U.S. employers. The issue is less about capability and more about market structure. Cross-border hiring often fails not because the candidate pool is weak, but because the connection between supply and demand is poorly organized. Employers struggle to identify candidates who are both skilled and eligible. Candidates struggle to determine which roles and companies are realistically viable.
Several structural issues contribute to this divide. The table below outlines them clearly.
Structural Barriers in U.S. Tech Hiring
| Barrier | How It Affects Employers | How It Affects Global Talent |
| Sponsorship Uncertainty | Slower screening and mismatches | Difficulty identifying viable companies |
| Fragmented Workflows | Hiring breaks across multiple tools | No clear path from application to offer |
| Domestic-Focused Search | Competition for the same limited pool | Skills remain unseen |
| Late Immigration Review | Offers stall and timelines stretch | Delays and missed opportunities |
These barriers show up across companies of every size. And they compound. When sponsorship uncertainty persists, employers delay decisions. When eligibility reviews come late, timelines slip. When workflows are fragmented, the process becomes more complicated to manage, harder to measure, and harder to improve.
Why Traditional Hiring Tools No Longer Match Modern Teams

Recruitment process – Image | Shutterstock
Many hiring platforms were built for a labor market that assumed geography as the default filter. Candidates were expected to be local, and work authorization checks were often treated as an exception.
That model fits fewer companies today. Remote and hybrid work have expanded the competitive set. Engineering teams are distributed. Companies operate across time zones. Skills are global. Yet many hiring workflows still follow an older sequence: post a role, wait for applicants, filter at scale, and only ask more profound eligibility questions after time has already been spent.
For employers, the consequence is not just delay. It is variance. Hiring becomes harder to predict because eligibility risk surfaces later. Recruiters spend time on candidates who cannot progress. Candidates spend time on roles that were never viable. The process looks busy, but throughput remains low.
The comparison below shows how these two approaches differ.
Traditional Hiring vs Access-Focused Hiring
| Traditional Approach | Access-Focused Approach |
| Employers wait for applicants | Pipelines match skills to company needs |
| Immigration reviewed late | Eligibility visible early |
| Domestic-first sourcing | Global candidates were included from the start |
| Manual résumé filtering | Structured matching using defined criteria |
For professional audiences, the key point is this: cross-border hiring fails most often at the coordination layer. The value is not in “more candidates.” It has a better signal, earlier, tighter matching logic, and fewer late-stage constraints.
How JackyBa Helps Employers Move Forward With Clarity
JackyBa, created by Anitha Sri Maheswaran, sits within a broader trend: building hiring infrastructure that treats global access as a design requirement rather than a special case. The platform’s purpose is not to replace the hiring function, but to reduce friction in areas that consistently slow cross-border recruiting.
The model focuses on three areas that typically drive wasted time and stalled offers.
1. Sponsorship and Eligibility Clarity Earlier in the Funnel
In many hiring processes, eligibility is confirmed after screening and interviews. That sequencing creates avoidable risk. When eligibility is visible earlier, employers can plan timelines more accurately, and candidates can focus their efforts on roles that are realistically reachable.
2. Skill Matching Built Around Defined Criteria, Not Broad Keywords
Keyword-driven searching is a blunt tool for technical roles. Teams often care about specific stacks, depth in systems, and project history that a resume keyword scan cannot reliably capture. Platforms that emphasize structured criteria aim to improve relevance and reduce mismatches, which matters most when hiring teams are operating under time pressure.
3. A More Connected Workflow from Discovery to Decision
Fragmented workflows make it challenging to track outcomes, identify bottlenecks, and improve the process. A more unified pathway can reduce handoff friction between sourcing, screening, immigration review, and onboarding steps, especially when multiple stakeholders are involved.
The Talent Accessibility Model
JackyBa’s framework depends on three elements working together.
- Skill Alignment. Employers and candidates understand the match between job requirements and abilities.
- Eligibility Visibility. Work authorization or visa category is identified early.
- Process Clarity. Both sides know what the hiring process looks like and how to navigate it.
For employers, this model is essentially an operational argument. Hiring becomes more consistent when the process is designed to reduce uncertainty early rather than absorb it later.
How Limited Access Shapes the Future of U.S. Innovation

Talents all over the globe – Image | Shutterstock
Demand for technical talent continues to rise in fields such as AI, cybersecurity, data engineering, robotics, and cloud infrastructure. Domestic training capacity is growing, but many employers still report that supply is not keeping pace with demand.
Over time, this imbalance creates strategic effects. Companies are pushed toward tradeoffs: delaying launches, narrowing scope, stretching teams, or shifting certain work to other locations to maintain delivery. None of these options is cost-free. They affect product quality, speed, and organizational stability.
At the same time, global technical training ecosystems are expanding. More engineers graduate each year with relevant skills. Certifications and specialized programs are more accessible across markets. In theory, this should relieve pressure on U.S. hiring. In practice, the benefit is limited when employers cannot reliably access that talent pool through efficient, sponsorship-aware pathways.
The bottleneck is not only talent supply. It is hiring infrastructure.
Building a More Effective Pathway for Employers and Talent
Improving cross-border hiring is less about adding another job board and more about improving the rules of engagement. Employers need systems that reduce ambiguity and increase predictability. Candidates need clearer visibility into viable options and fewer dead ends.
Platforms like JackyBa contribute to this by offering:
- Clear insight into roles aligned with sponsorship requirements
- Accurate matching based on skills and experience
- Early clarity around visa eligibility
- A consistent pathway from application to onboarding
For experienced hiring leaders, the practical question is whether these features reduce cycle time, improve offer conversion, and create cleaner pipelines without increasing compliance risk or process complexity.
Final Thoughts
The U.S. needs technical talent, and that talent exists worldwide. The problem often lies in the system connecting employers and candidates.
JackyBa was created to help close that gap by making global hiring more precise and structured so that employers can build teams with greater confidence.
About the Author
James Wilson is a freelance business and technology journalist who writes about recruiting, talent shortages, and the future of work. They cover how employers are adapting their hiring strategies, especially in fast-growing fields like software engineering, cybersecurity, and AI.


