human-AI collaboration – Live Laugh Love Do http://livelaughlovedo.com A Super Fun Site Sat, 29 Nov 2025 20:26:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 Machines will take millions of jobs http://livelaughlovedo.com/finance/over-the-last-decade-weve-invested-in-over-20-unicorns-the-machines-will-take-millions-of-jobs-but-theyll-never-lead-like-a-human-can/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/finance/over-the-last-decade-weve-invested-in-over-20-unicorns-the-machines-will-take-millions-of-jobs-but-theyll-never-lead-like-a-human-can/#respond Sun, 28 Sep 2025 13:20:11 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/09/28/over-the-last-decade-weve-invested-in-over-20-unicorns-the-machines-will-take-millions-of-jobs-but-theyll-never-lead-like-a-human-can/ [ad_1]

The World Economic Forum’s latest report produced news of 92 million jobs being eliminated due to AI by 2030. But in that same report was the prediction of an estimated 170 million new jobs, which will create a net gain of 78 million. As leaders who have invested in over 20 unicorns over the last decade and advised hundreds of companies on technological shifts and transformation for decades, we have seen that panic of job loss and skyrocketing unemployment dominate headlines and drive the news cycles, but the whole story always tells a different tale. 

Yes, we will see disruption and job displacement — that’s inevitable. We’ve lived through the tech boom of the ’90s, the birth of the internet, cloud computing, and waves of automation over the past 35 years. Has any of this led to the predicted dystopia? Consider this: in 1991, the global unemployment rate was 5.1%. After three decades of technological revolution and exponential AI growth, the global unemployment rate in 2024 was 4.89%. If you believed only the headlines that followed every technological breakthrough of the past 35 years, you’d assume half the world would be unemployed by now. 

The truth? Technology always creates more than it destroys. 

Increased AI adoption across sectors

That same report from the WEF shows that adoption of AI is growing rapidly, albeit unevenly, across sectors. This isn’t adoption for adoption’s sake. The labor market is being driven in this direction by four powerful forces. 

● AI automation: Almost 60% of firms (nearly 85% of large firms) implemented automation over the last 12 months. 

● Economic pressures: For companies to stay competitive, they are looking for efficiency in every aspect of their operation. The use of AI is the surest and fastest way to achieve measurable increases in efficiency. 

● Green transitions: The combination of changes in climate and energy demand is causing enterprises to lean more into green technologies to slow the amount of overhead they must commit to energy. 

● Demographics: Demographic shifts are driving the need for increased roles in the caregiving industry. Aging populations need humans to help them in ways no machine can. Plus, these new and increased roles require entirely new management approaches.

These four forces are already affecting hiring pipelines, budgets, and boardroom strategy. 

Where jobs are emerging

Apart from the aforementioned care-giving sector, a historic employment boom is coming to IT and engineering. Unlike earlier tech booms, this surge is not about speculation and hype, but structural reinvention. The IDC projects AI spending will increase to $632 billion by 2028, signaling not a bubble but the emergence of sustainable growth. 

AI-native product development will come more to the forefront as we see the growth of products being enabled by AI andcompletely designed around it. AI product managers, AI UX designers, and prompt engineers are already becoming fixtures, supported by platforms like Microsoft Copilot, Salesforce Einstein, and Google Duet AI. These roles speak to the coming era of intelligent software. These are tools that learn, adapt, and anticipate. They will in turn, require builders who can manage and adapt to human needs with machine learning in real time.

The infrastructure aspect of this new age is just as transformative. AI-driven Cloud and DevOps (collectively called AIOps) will change how enterprises manage scale. New categories such as MLOps engineers, AI Cloud architects, observability engineers, and incident prediction analysts are emerging and growing in demand. The humans in these positions must be able to design systems that can anticipate failures, self-optimize, and operate with resilience at levels far beyond human monitoring. This moves the cloud from being elastic to being predictive.

There will be an increased risk associated with this growth. Cybersecurity and AI trust will be as integral to competitive advantage as innovation. As governments roll out the EU AI Act, National Institute of Standards and Technology standards, and similar regulations, companies will need AI cyber analysts, LLM red teamers, and AI risk officers to safeguard not only networks but the algorithms that drive them. Leaders whoexperience the most success now will be those who build trust into their products with as much thought and strategy as they build in features. They will understand that explainability and compliance are strategic assets.

As the growth of AI infrastructure increases, data engineers and knowledge designers will become as central as application developers once were. Enterprise knowledge ecosystems from retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) pipelines to vector databases and knowledge graphs are poised to create new categories of work. Plus, in nearly every vertical (finance, healthcare, legal, HR), AI specializations will generate hybrid roles where you not only need to master the functions of that role, but you’ll also need to be an expert in how to leverage AI to augment your duties and increase your output and efficiency. These types of positions will be drivers of industry-specific disruption.

Adaptation is non-negotiable. Software engineers must evolve into AI-assisted developers, DevOps professionals into AIOps specialists, and product managers into AI-native strategists. UX designers will focus on explainability and trust design, reshaping how people interact with intelligent systems. Those who move fastest will define the rules of the AI economy itself.

Humans have to lead

Hybrid Intelligence Operations demand executives who can create synergies between human creativity and machine execution that neither could achieve alone. AI cannot replace leadership, judgment, ethical decision-making, or vision. AI is a tool, perhaps the most powerful ever created, but it is useless without proper human oversight and leadership. 

In the arena of AI Ethics and Governance, leaders will need to serve as directors of societal responsibility. They must decide what constitutes ethical AI deployment and have the courageand backbone to stop when profit optimization crosses the line into human cost. These decisions cannot be algorithmic. They demand judgment, empathy, and ethics.

Cross-Functional Integration is becoming critical as we see traditional org charts becoming less and less relevant. Leaders have to be able to speak to and negotiate between technical, financial, regulatory, and human teams to foster solutions across age gaps, personality differences, and functional silos. 

AI can forecast trends, but only leaders can paint compelling pictures of the future that inspire teams to embrace change rather than resist it. Creating a strategic vision and being able to emotionally sell it to the team via storytelling is something no AI will ever be able to do as well as a human. Machines can execute, but they’ll never lead; humans must combine AI scale with human leadership.

How to win the future

The age of a leader delegating tasks and managing workflows no longer exists in successful businesses, as AI can handle most operational tasks. Leaders must evolve or risk becoming as automated as the roles they once managed. To do this, focus on uniquely human capabilities in your employees and hone those skills. These will be the core assets of an AI-driven world.

Begin redesigning your organization now around human skills and phase out traditional hierarchies. Drill down and find out what your people bring that is uniquely human. Double down on developing those attributes to their maximum potential. 

Then, teach and show teams that AI is a human multiplier, not a human replacement. Prove to them that technology is a competitive advantage that helps them become the most powerful version of themselves at work. Your teams need to understand not just how AI works, but how it helps them while also helping the company. The more they understand, the less they fear, and the more they buy in. 

The winning leaders of this decade will be those who recognize and show their teams that AI isn’t a threat to human jobs, it’s an augmentor of human capability. The leaders and companies that accomplish this will remember 2025-2030 not for jobs lost, but for becoming pioneers of the age of human-AI partnerships, reshaping entire industries.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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AI isn’t coming for your job—it’s coming for your whole org chart  http://livelaughlovedo.com/career-and-productivity/ai-isnt-coming-for-your-job-its-coming-for-your-whole-org-chart/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/career-and-productivity/ai-isnt-coming-for-your-job-its-coming-for-your-whole-org-chart/#respond Mon, 21 Jul 2025 01:56:16 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/07/21/ai-isnt-coming-for-your-job-its-coming-for-your-whole-org-chart/ [ad_1]

Last month, my friend Amy, a mid-level marketing manager at a Fortune 500 company, had her entire junior analyst team “restructured.” Why officially? “Strategic realignment.” Reality? AI tools now handle what used to be three full-time positions.

Amy isn’t alone in this new reality. AI has eliminated 76,440 jobs in 2025 alone, and 41% of global employers plan to reduce their workforce in the next five years due to AI automation. But, you don’t just lose your current job when this happens, you lose the corporate ladder you were climbing. The relationships you made and the personal career brand you built that led to promotions and growth are gone.  

The Career Ladder is Breaking (and No One’s Talking About It) 

We are currently experiencing changes in the job market that we have never seen post-industrial revolution, specifically in Big Tech. Big Tech reduced hiring new graduates by 25% in 2024 compared to 2023. Simultaneously, they increased hiring professionals with 2–5 years of experience by 27%.

How can you pay your dues, learn, and build your career when there are no entry-level positions to be had? This paradox is becoming more and more common in today’s workforce; companies want someone with experience, but there are fewer and fewer positions that allow an employee to gain experience. 

This sea change feels different. The past 35 years have given us more rapid change than at any time in history. The speed at which technology has advanced has placed us in the dot-com boom, the mobile phone revolution, and the cloud transformation. AI isn’t just changing what we do and how we perform, it’s eliminating the steps we traditionally started with to learn, grow, and develop our soft and hard skills to build a foundation for a career. 

Speed and Efficiency Now, Devastation Later

The entry-level people who filled the office floor, built a unique and diverse team, and brought life and energy into the office are now being phased out. AI does what they did faster and AI doesn’t take sick days or need health insurance. Lawyers who have just passed the bar, learning the basics of a profession via document review? That process is now automated. 

The new generation of the workforce feels a risk when investing in a four-year degree. A study from the World Economic Forum revealed that  49% of US Gen Z job hunters believe AI has reduced the value of their college education. What will this lead to in 10–15 years, as people with experience and knowledge begin to retire and fewer people are qualified to assume those roles? 

Another question: for those of us in the midst of a career, how do we advance when the ladder that was once just a few rungs up is chopped off and thrown in a corporate fireplace?  

Companies Currently Solving the Problem

When studying organizations meeting these changes head-on and winning, I’ve seen a few commonalities. They don’t simply cut costs to cut costs. They are fundamentally reimagining how work gets done. For example:

  • British Columbia Investment Management Corporation 

BCI increased productivity by 10% to 20% for 84% of their Microsoft Copilot users while increasing job satisfaction by 68%. This resulted in saving more than 2,300 person-hours with automation. This was accomplished not by simply implementing AI, but by the way they redesigned workflows around human-AI collaboration.

  • Daiichi Sankyo 

Within a month of building their internal AI system (DS-GAI), over 80% of employees reported improved productivity and accuracy. They’re using AI advancements not to replace current employees, but to augment their capabilities.

These are the types of approaches any company looking to implement AI and automation can work into their deployment project plans can follow. How can they foster increased human-tech collaboration? How can they make their current team more productive and take the business to levels previously unattainable? 

People Ahead of the Curve

The good news is, there are plenty of professionals who are thriving during these days of upheaval and transition. For the most part, these people are taking three common approaches to find ways to use AI to their advantage. 

  • They orchestrate with AI

Successful people I know don’t fight AI, they teach themselves how to direct it and use it to their benefit. They understand that humans will always be in charge of technology. With that knowledge, they can position themselves as the conductor with an orchestra of AI at their command.

  • They Focus on Uniquely Human Skills

Develop and hone the skills that AI amplifies. Humans will be freed to build creative problem-solving, strategic thinking, relationship-building processes, and guidelines. When AI is deployed to do all mundane repetitive tasks, these skills are where humans must thrive.

  • They Position Themselves at the Intersection 

The future will be written and commanded by individuals who bridge the unique creative minds of humans with the efficiency, accuracy, and speed of AI. 

What is the common thread of these three points? How you use AI to your advantage. You can stand on the beach and scream at the coming tidal wave or grab a surfboard and teach yourself to ride that wave. Those who choose the latter path will be those who run the world. 

The World We Know is on Death’s Door

The truth we all must face today is that 2025–2026 will be the year companies prepare for a generational change in how we work with AI. This will disrupt nearly every industry. Org charts will be completely rewritten or scrapped entirely. But remember that you can make a difference and influence this change by simply preparing yourself as I have laid out in this article. 

The choice is no longer whether AI is for you, the choice is how you decide to leverage AI to your benefit. We’ve seen this before; I remember people pushing back against using computers, people pushing back against using email, people pushing back against cellphones. Pushing back against AI today is precisely what those people did. The professionals who embrace this change and use AI as a tool for advancement will be the ones who write the org charts of the future. 

Start today. Your future self will thank you.

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