Even if AI doesn't replace your job, it might hasten your exit in other ways.
We're all hearing about ways that advancements in AI technology might change our working lives. Maybe you're already seeing it happen. Your workplace is starting to implement it, and you're seeing the ways it's shifting how you do your job. Maybe you worry about being replaced by it, and your fears are not unfounded. If companies have ways to cut costs, they tend to do it. And that might mean your role ends up on the cutting room floor. It's a scary time, and one that we're not always prepared for. We don't have a roadmap for it, so it can go in any direction. You don't know what to expect, which can feel unmooring. But AI is coming for jobs in even more indirect ways, as evidenced by this story.
Sometimes bosses want to feel like they're doing something, but they don't have a real plan. So they push the buck onto you, and everything comes crashing down. AI tools are just another way to do that. If you're truly invested in your company and your employees, then you would probably try to work with them to improve their performance. You wouldn't blindly take the advice of a robot and assume that it has your best interests at heart. But that's what the boss in this story said he was going to do, in an email that sent a chill down the spines of all the employees.
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2 weeks ago
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