Close Menu
WashingtonExec
    Podcast Episodes
    LinkedIn Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    LinkedIn Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    WashingtonExec
    Subscribe To The Daily
    • News & Headlines
    • Executive Councils
    • Videos
    • Podcast
    • Events
      • 🏆 Chief Officer Awards
      • 🏆 Pinnacle Awards
    • About
    • Contact Us
    LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
    WashingtonExec
    You are at:Home»OpEd»For CACI, Mission, Adaptability & Cultivating Talent Attract Top Technologists 
    OpEd

    For CACI, Mission, Adaptability & Cultivating Talent Attract Top Technologists 

    By Jason BalesFebruary 25, 2026
    Share
    LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Email
    Jason Bales
    Jason Bales, CACI

    Jason Bales is the chief technology officer at CACI International Inc., where he leads innovation strategies that align cutting-edge technology with mission-critical outcomes. 

    The competition for skilled technologists is fierce and growing. A recent survey shows 87% of technology leaders face hiring challenges, prompting Big Tech and startups to lean on compensation as a competitive advantage. But attracting top-tier engineers and innovators is about more than salary, it’s about purpose, adaptability, and a commitment to shaping the future. 

    According to a Gallup survey, employees with a strong sense of purpose at work are 5.6 times as likely to be engaged in their jobs as those with a low sense of purpose. In the national security space, purpose lies in the mission-driven work, supporting warfighters with innovative technology and frontline experience. Nearly 40% of our workforce are veterans, a testament to our culture of building a team who understands and connects with mission. By fostering an outcome mindset, we keep national security and the men and women who serve at the forefront of everything we do.  

    When you join CACI, the work goes beyond writing code and deploying systems, it’s about shaping outcomes that protect lives and strengthen our nation’s defense. Veterans bring operational insight, and we pair them with engineers and scientists who share that commitment. This alignment creates a culture where technology isn’t an end in itself, it’s a means to deliver mission success. 

    Closing capability gaps and novel applications of technology set us apart from both industry peers and Big Tech. Our teams are innovators focused on applying emerging technologies to our capabilities to enrich mission outcomes. For instance, with AI, we’re enhancing our existing technology, amplifying the impact of our developers, and enabling our workforce to deliver more capability, faster, without sacrificing quality or relevance.  

    This culture of adaptability and innovation has earned recognition beyond our walls. Our dedication to meaningful national security work has been honored with four Edison Awards, which recognize the world’s highest-level innovations, products, services, and business leaders. 

    To sustain this unique blend of mission-driven work and next-generation technology development, it is critical to cultivate future technologists that want to advance our programs and capabilities in the same vein. To do this, we take a holistic approach to recruitment and retention, from hiring talent to helping grow it. We invest in the roots of the industry by forging partnerships with universities like Virginia Tech and George Mason and assuming advisory roles shaping curricula.  

    Programs like our Virginia Tech Scholars initiative give students hands-on experience solving mission-relevant problems before they graduate. We also engage with service academies, providing training and resources that prepare future warfighters for the technologies they’ll encounter in the field. Ensuring young engineers and scientists are engaged and interested in national security work is a centerpiece of our talent acquisition strategy.  

    The bottom line: Attracting great people isn’t about outpaying Big Tech and start-ups, it’s about offering what they can’t: the chance to work with an unparalleled workforce driven by purpose, technological adaptability, and a commitment to shaping the future of the industry.  

    Previous ArticleAgile Defense Wins Phase 1 Alliant 3 Award

    Related Posts

    Careers, Not Jobs: How We Win Technical Talent in Government Contracting’s Most Competitive Market

    Advancing Missions with Purpose: Grant DeMola

    Top National Security Execs to Watch in 2026: CACI’s Serenity Paez

    Comments are closed.

    LinkedIn Follow Button
    LinkedIn Logo Follow Us on LinkedIn
    Latest Industry Leaders

    Top Industry Execs to Watch in 2026

    Top MarCom Execs to Watch in 2026

    Load More
    Latest Posts

    For CACI, Mission, Adaptability & Cultivating Talent Attract Top Technologists 

    February 25, 2026

    Agile Defense Wins Phase 1 Alliant 3 Award

    February 25, 2026

    Top Industry Execs to Watch in 2026: Sigma Defense’s Matt Jones

    February 25, 2026

    The Swedish Architect Who Wasn’t: How One Scam Reinforced Tiziana Barrow’s Mission to Humanize Cyber Risk

    February 25, 2026

    CGI Federal Wins $64M EPA Contract to Modernize Financial Platform

    February 25, 2026
    Quick Links
    • Executive Councils & Committees
    • Chief Officer Awards
    • Pinnacle Awards
    • Advertise With Us
    • About WashingtonExec
    • Contact
    Connect
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    • Facebook
    • Twitter

    Subscribe to The Daily

    Connect. Inform. Celebrate.

    Copyright © WashingtonExec, Inc. | All Rights Reserved. Powered by JMG

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.