“We’re not hiring for frameworks we read about in blog posts. We’re hiring for what actually gets deployed.”
This issue of Redeployed is brought to you by Tecla: In 2026, it’s not about trendy frameworks. It’s about what actually ships. Tecla helps you hire senior nearshore engineers who already work in the stacks that matter from TypeScript and Go to LangChain, FastAPI, and Terraform. These are builders who can wire AI into real products and push to prod without slowing the team down. Because hype doesn’t scale. Tools do.
Web development stacks are shifting. Not based on hype, but on deployment. In 2026, companies are looking for systems that scale, support AI integration, and deliver fast. Here are the key signals we’re seeing from recent Tecla client requests.
TypeScript is the default
It remains the foundation for modern front-end work. Every client asking for React, Next.js, or Vite is asking for TypeScript by name. It's the go-to for teams that prioritize scale, safety, and strong tooling.
Go is back in demand
Especially in AI-adjacent products. It’s showing up in lightweight service layers, event-driven APIs, and edge inference systems. For clients prioritizing speed and concurrency, Go is increasingly part of the conversation.
AI-native frameworks are getting real
LangChain, FastAPI, and vector-aware services are no longer niche. Teams are hiring for engineers who can build full-stack systems with embedded AI behavior—prompt flows, RAG setups, and real-time orchestration.
GraphQL is evolving
Still useful, especially for flexible client-driven APIs. But now it’s being paired with AI context layers. Clients want engineers who know how to design schemas that feed models, not just apps.
Vercel, Terraform, and shipping muscle
Infrastructure as code matters more than ever. Platforms like Vercel and tools like Terraform are showing up in requests as teams move from experimentation to reliable, automated deployment.
Why this matters
Hiring in 2026 isn’t about checking boxes. It’s about finding engineers who know how to plug AI into the tools that already ship products. Stack decisions are now team decisions.
That’s why more teams are turning to nearshore hires not for cost alone, but for alignment. At Tecla, we’re seeing companies prioritize developers who already work in the tools their stack depends on. Engineers fluent in Go, TypeScript, Terraform, and LangChain. Builders who can co-develop with AI, not just integrate it later.
In this cycle, talent that ships matters more than ever.
More to come…
– Gino Ferrand, Founder @ Tecla


