The Anxiety of Being Replaced by AI
(Credit: Getty Images)

The Anxiety of Being Replaced by AI

The fear of AI coming for your job is real. But experts say you can mitigate the anxiety, and even find a silver lining in the changes. Plus, would you work at home alongside friends?

No alt text provided for this image
(Credit: Getty Images)

The workers who fear losing their jobs to artificial intelligence

Claire has worked as a PR at a major consulting firm, based in London, for six years. The 34-year-old enjoys her job and earns a comfortable salary, but in the past six months, she’s started to feel apprehensive about the future of her career. The reason: artificial intelligence.

“I don’t think the quality of the work that I’m producing could be matched by a machine just yet,” says Claire, whose last name is being withheld to protect her job security. “But at the same time, I’m amazed at how quickly?ChatGPT?has become so sophisticated. Give it a few more years, and I can absolutely imagine a world in which a bot does my job just as well as I can. I hate to think what that might mean for my employability.”

In recent years, as headlines about robots stealing human jobs have proliferated – and as generative AI tools like ChatGPT havse quickly become more accessible – some workers report starting to feel anxious about their futures and whether the skills they have will be relevant to the labour market in years to come.?

In March, Goldman Sachs published a report showing that AI could?replace the equivalent of 300 million full-time jobs. Last year, PwC’s annual global workforce survey showed that almost a third of respondents said they?were worried about the prospect of their role being replaced by technology?in three years.

“I think a lot of creatives are concerned,” says Alys Marshall, a 29-year-old copywriter based in Bristol, UK. “We’re all just hoping that our clients will recognise [our] value, and choose the authenticity of [a human] over the price and convenience of AI tools.”

Now, career coaches and HR experts are saying that although some anxiety might be justified, employees need to focus on what they can control. Instead of panicking about possibly losing their jobs to machines, they should invest in learning how to work alongside technology. If they treat it as a resource and not a threat, add the experts, they’ll make themselves more valuable to potential employers – and feel less anxious.??

Read more from Josie Cox on AI anxiety.

No alt text provided for this image
(Credit: Getty Images)

The rise of home co-working spaces?

There are many upsides to remote work – but some workers report that the set-up, at times, can be isolating. While coffee shops and libraries are always an option to get out of the house and around others, some workers are instead opting to create co-working spaces in their own homes. And they’re popping up all over the world.

Read more from Uri Bram on the workers creating collaborative spaces with friends.?

That’s our newsletter this week. Visit BBC Worklife ?and?BBC Business for the latest.

–Meredith Turits, Editor, BBC Worklife

?

Johnny Thomson MCIM

RiskSTOP Group Marketing & Communications Director. Diploma in Professional Marketing (Level 6) at CIM | The Chartered Institute of Marketing

1 年

All just part of our augmented future guys. We're evolving so that machines do much of the work, so that hopefully we can do the more fulfilling human tasks. Let's see this as a positive thing and make sure it works for the benefit of all, not just a tiny few. Lessons from the past here everyone.

回复
Yasar Hayat

Marketing Research.......

1 年

Hi, Hope you will be fine. My name is Yasar Hayat from Lahore Pakistan. I have 22 years experience in marketing research (Quantitative, Qualitative and Retail). I have conducted so many type of studies in different sectors like... Opinion Poll, Social, FMCG, Oil Industry, Automobile, etc... I have a field expert team in all regions of Pakistan. So if you have any work for Pakistan please contact with me. Yasar Hayat from Pakistan 00923214603931

Mr Christopher Adeyinka Ologbenla

Director of Training. Food Safety First - CIEH. Centre. CAO Ventures Ltd - Director.

1 年

The world is gradually moving towards automation. Soon now or later there will be no human employees. Amazing prospect.

回复
Harshita Sharma

?? Master of International Business @Unimelb | ?? Business Growth Strategist | ?? Emotional Intelligence Tips | DM for support ??

1 年

How is the title funny for people to react that way? Interested to know the answers ??

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

BBC News的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了