Series #1 – The First Jobs AI Is Learning to Do

Living With AI

Artificial intelligence has become part of the daily conversation almost overnight. Some people are excited about it, some are worried about it, and most of us are simply trying to understand what it actually means.

One of the questions I hear most often is a simple one: Which jobs will AI affect first?

If you step back and look at how these systems work, a pattern begins to appear. AI is very good at reading information, summarizing it, answering questions, and following structured rules. That means the first changes are likely to appear in jobs that involve large amounts of digital information and routine decision-making.

Below are a few areas where analysts expect the earliest shifts.


Areas Where AI May Change Work the Most

Job AreaApproximate WorkforceWhy AI Fits
Customer service / call centers~3 million (U.S.) / ~20 million (global)answering questions and troubleshooting
Administrative support~22 million (U.S.) / ~150 million (global)scheduling, organizing information, preparing documents
Bookkeeping & routine accounting~2 million (U.S.) / ~12 million (global)structured financial rules and data
Legal research & paralegal work~350,000 (U.S.) / ~2–3 million (global)reviewing contracts and searching case law
Marketing content & copywriting~1.5 million (U.S.) / ~8–10 million (global)generating routine written content
Translation & transcription~70,000 (U.S.) / ~500,000+ (global)speech recognition and language translation

One important point is worth keeping in mind.

Technology rarely eliminates an entire profession overnight. What usually happens instead is that the same work can be done by fewer people. One person with powerful tools can sometimes do the work that once required several.

That pattern has appeared in almost every technological shift we’ve experienced, from tractors on farms to computers in offices.

The real question may not be whether AI replaces jobs. It may be how the way we work gradually changes as these tools become part of everyday life.

This series is simply an attempt to watch that process as it unfolds.


A Question Worth Considering

Where do you see AI already beginning to change the work people do around you?


Living With AI Series

Next in the series:

The Pattern Most People Miss

will be posted on 3/10/26

Return to Ideas & Open Forum → Living With AI


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Mawgan
Mawgan
17 days ago

Hey Rich, probably no surprise but I have opinions on the rise of AI, like you having seen many “job killers” from tech firms emerge over the last 30+ years.
One of the first things to get straight is that we have been living with AI in one form or another for decades. The rules based capabilities on many commonly used PC tools are basic AI, the call handling applications (IVR/IVA) and the rather questionable chat bots on many websites.
What makes this iteration different is what sits behind the AI applications. No longer does AI only use the intelligence from internal processes and analysis along fixed or predefined paths. The advent of LLM’s (large language models), the compute power in data centres, the access to massive broadband speeds and the construction of agentic and generative AI architectures, results in levels and quality of output we could only imagine a few years ago. Most AI we experience is not one thing, it’s a combination of capabilities that can be orchestrated by one “agent” written to do this specific task, combining with research or transactional agents that bring information together. This can then be analysed by an agent designed to check the quality of the response, compare this to other similar questions and responses before deciding what to present back. All of this is happening at lightning fast speeds which enhances the impression that these agents or programs are intelligent enough to replace humans…full stop ( or period as you like to say). The challenge we and AI face is that unless the output is qualified, checked, reviewed in a way that most humans would do, what AI creates can be dangerously wrong as often as it is dazzlingly creative. Responsible AI is a phrase we will begin to hear more often, it’s hugely important that we don’t just accept what is presented. AI can hallucinate and will fill in gaps with unconfirmed information to complete its task, blindly accepting this information is dangerous and damaging in many ways.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m a huge advocate for AI but it has to be used responsibly and applied where it can add the most value, not just thrown at every opportunity because it is flavour of the month!

All the best my friend

Renée Crowl
Renée Crowl
17 days ago

I have embraced AI in healthcare. I used to literally spend hours a week researching potential client diagnoses, diagnostic tests, and treatments. AI could give me all that information in minutes. As John Dewey said, “A problem well put is half-solved.” Asking the right question is a lot of it. And, of course, information has to be verified. Harvard School for Public Health offers a course about AI in healthcare. They project a 50% reduction in treatment costs when using AI for diagnoses; 40% projected improvement in health outcomes when using AI for diagnoses; and a $187.9 estimated market for AI in health care in 2030!

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