Let’s start with a truth most people would rather ignore: AI is coming for jobs. Not all of them. Only the ones held by people who refuse to change.
If that makes you uncomfortable, good. Comfort is where careers go to die. The problem isn’t AI. It’s inertia.
The modern workplace rewards velocity, not tenure. If you can learn, adapt, and teach others how to work smarter, you’re not just safe you’re indispensable. But if your core competency is “doing it the same way I did in 2016,” you’re running on borrowed time.
Let’s be clear: AI isn’t going to fire you. But the employee sitting three desks down who’s using it to automate tasks, write better emails, respond faster, and free up time for strategy? They’re going to outperform you. And when budget season hits, guess who looks redundant?
This isn’t theoretical. A recent study by the World Economic Forum estimates that 44% of worker skills will be disrupted in the next five years. That’s worth reading again. A recent study by the World Economic Forum estimates that 44% of worker skills will be disrupted in the next five years. Almost half of what you know today will be irrelevant by the time an incoming freshman earns their high school diploma in 2029.
So no, you’re not overreacting by learning to write better prompts or test automation tools. You’re underreacting if you don’t.
The most valuable skill today isn’t insurance experience, Excel, or even sales. It’s adaptability.
Be the person who:
Because the fastest way to job security is to become the one no one wants to work without.
If you’re a boss, here’s your part: Start noticing.
Not just results. Notice the growth.
Your most valuable employee isn’t the one who “never needs help.” It’s the one who’s learning new tools, bringing new ideas, and making the whole team smarter.
Recognize them. Promote them. Give them the mic in meetings. Thank them publicly. And for the love of morale—stop rewarding the people who just maintain the status quo.
Otherwise, don’t be shocked when your best learner walks out the door and lands a better gig at the agency across town. The one that’s evolving.
Change is scary. Always has been. But it’s also an invitation. You can spend your energy resisting the future, or you can lean into it like a golden retriever at a dog park. One of those outcomes leads to irrelevance. The other leads to a promotion.
You choose.