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AI vs Workers: The 4 Categories of Jobs That Survive Automation

After nineteen episodes covering which jobs are being replaced by automation, the series finale answers the one question every viewer has been asking: which work survives. MIT, Stanford, the BLS, and McKinsey all converge on the same four categories. Here are the named occupations, the BLS growth projections, and the practical pivot for each. Watch the next video in the playlist to see the full series from the beginning.

Chapters:
0:00 Scene 1
2:17 Scene 2
4:44 Scene 3
7:09 Scene 4
9:33 Scene 5
11:55 Quiz Time

#AIJobs #AICareer #careergrowth

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Disclosure

The avatars and voices in this video are AI-generated. All content -- research, scripts, lesson design, and the custom video engine -- is created by a CISSP, CISM, and PMP certified professional with a Master's in Project Management, a B.S. in Information Technology, and a Doctorate in Business Administration in progress.

This channel exists to make learning accessible and straightforward.

This channel is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Department of Labor, the Federal Reserve, McKinsey & Company, Goldman Sachs, the World Economic Forum, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), any university or research institution, any AI company (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Microsoft, Meta, etcetera), any company named in the case studies, or any union or trade association. All employment-impact data is sourced from publicly available BLS Occupational Outlook releases, OECD AI and the Future of Skills reports, McKinsey AI workforce studies, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research notes, World Economic Forum Future of Jobs reports, public company press releases and SEC filings, and named outlet reporting, and is provided for educational purposes only. Forecasts are forecasts — actual outcomes vary by region, employer, skill level, and how individual workers adapt. Nothing in this series is career counseling, legal advice, or financial advice; consult a qualified career counselor, attorney, or financial professional for decisions that affect your livelihood. If you have been laid off, contact your state unemployment office for benefits, your former employer for severance and continuation of health coverage, and a state-licensed career counselor (free through CareerOneStop at careeronestop.org or by calling 1-877-872-5627).

Видео AI vs Workers: The 4 Categories of Jobs That Survive Automation канала Professor Erica
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