AI Impact on Jobs: How can Workers Prepare?

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In a previous blog, I explored the main findings from a recent MIT paper on AI’s impact on work. In this blog, I want to offer practical advice for workers worried about their jobs future. There is a lot automation anxiety surrounding the topic which often gets amplified through click-bait sensational articles. Fortunately, the research from the MIT-IBM Watson paper offers sensible and detailed enough information to help workers take charge of their careers. Here are the main highlights.

From Jobs to Tasks

The first important learning from the report is to think of your job as group of tasks rather than a homogenous unit. The average worker performs a wide range of tasks from communicating issues, solving problems, selling ideas to evaluating others. If you never thought of your job this way, here is a suggestion: track what you do in one work day. Pay attention to the different tasks you perform and write down the time it takes to complete them. Be specific enough in descriptions that go beyond “checking emails.” When you read and write emails, you are trying to accomplish something. What is it?

Once you do that for a few days, you start getting a clearer picture of your job as a collection of tasks. The next step then is to evaluate each task asking the following questions:

  • Which tasks brings the most value to the organization you are working for?
  • Which tasks are repetitive enough to be automated?
  • Which tasks can be delegated or passed on to other in your team?
  • Which tasks can you do best and which ones do you struggle the most?
  • Which tasks do you enjoy the most?

As you evaluate your job through these questions, you can better understand not just how good of a fit it is for your as an individual but also how automation may transform your work in the coming years. As machine learning becomes more prevalent, the repetitive parts of your job are most likely to disappear.

Tasks on the rise

The MIT-IBM Watson report analyzed job listings over a period of ten years and identified groups of tasks that were in higher demand than others. That is, as job change, certain tasks become more valuable either because they cannot be replaced by machine learning or because there is growing need for it.

According to the research, tasks in ascendance are:

  • Administrative
  • Design
  • Industry Knowledge
  • Personal care
  • Service

Note that the last two tend to be part of lower wage jobs. Personal care is an interesting one (i.e.: hair stylist, in-home nurses, etc.). Even with the growing trend in automations, we still cannot teach a robot to cut hair. That soft but precise touch from the human hand is very difficult to replicate, at least for now.

How much of your job consists of any of the tasks above?

Tasks at risk

On the flip side, some tasks are in decline. Some of this is particular to more mature economies like the US while others have a more general impact due to wide-spread adoption of technologies. The list of these tasks highlighted in the report are:

  • Media
  • Writing
  • Manufacturing
  • Production

The last two are no surprise as the trend of either offshoring or mechanizing these tasks has been underway for decades. The first two, however, are new. As technologies and platforms abound, these tasks either become more accessible to wider pool of workers which makes them less valuable in the workplace. Just think about what it took to broadcast a video in the past and what it takes to do it now. In the era of Youtube, garage productions abound sometimes with almost as much quality as studio productions.

If your job consists mostly of these tasks, beware.

Occupational Shifts

While looking at tasks is important, overall occupations are also being impacted. As AI adoption increases, these occupations either disappear or get incorporated into other occupations. Of those, it is worth noting that production and clerical jobs are in decline. Just as an anecdote, I noticed how my workplace is relying less and less on administrative assistants. The main result is that everybody now is doing scheduling what before used to be the domain of administrative jobs.

Occupations in ascendance are those in IT, Health care and Education/Training. The latter is interesting and indicative of a larger trend. As new applications emerge, there is a constant need for training and education. This benefits both traditional educational institutions but also entrepreneurial start ups. Just consider the rise of micro-degrees and coding schools emerging in cities all over this country.

Learning as a Skill

In short, learning is imperative. What that means is that every worker, regardless of occupation or wage level will be required to learn new tasks or skills. Long gone are the days where someone would learn all their professional knowledge in college and then use it for a lifetime career. Continual training is the order of the day for anyone hoping to stay competitive in the workplace.

I am not talking just about pursuing formal training paths through academic degrees or even training courses. I am talking about learning as a skill and discipline for you day-to-day job. Whether from successes or mistakes, we must always look for learning opportunities. Sometimes, the learning can come through research on an emerging topic. Other times, it can happen through observing others do something well. There are many avenues for learning new skills or information for those who are willing to look for it.

Do you have a training plan for your career? Maybe is time to consider one.

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