How You Can Tell If You Might Get Replaced By A Robot
Which occupations are most at risk has been a guessing game among economists, futurists and scholars trying to predict winners and losers.
Walmart it plans to deploy robots to scan shelves, scrub floors and perform other mundane tasks in its stores as the .
While the retail giant did not say which jobs, if any, might be lost as a result, the announcement 鈥 and the many more surely to follow at other big box retailers 鈥 begs the question: How can workers prepare for a future of increasingly automated work?
Millions of today鈥檚 jobs are expected to be affected by artificial intelligence and automation as part of the 鈥.鈥 But just which occupations are most at risk has been a guessing game among economists, futurists and scholars trying to predict .
As experts on and , we developed a new tool we believe will help workers more accurately determine the fate of their professions 鈥 and figure out how best to prepare.
Who Will Be Hurt
A host of research studies have examined where industrial revolution 4.0 is likely to wield its greatest impact.
Driven by a focus on cost and efficiency, most predictions pit one group of workers against another. For example, , , and even predictions by and .
While these broad groupings , they offer little guidance to individual workers at a time when, more than ever, individuals are expected to take responsibility for managing and .
Rather than focus on efficiency or cost, offers a more nuanced and sustainable tool for examining the fate of one鈥檚 profession: value.
Worker Value
Our research is based on the idea that every individual鈥檚 work creates value in his or her day-to-day job.
That value may be something a customer pays for, may enable co-workers to do their own jobs or may help the company to function internally. In any case, every job provides some degree of worth or usefulness to another party. The value is constant, but the way it is created and delivered to the end user can be threatened by automation and AI. Only after we鈥檝e evaluated that can we determine how the coming wave of technological change will affect a job鈥檚 future prospects. To assess these threats, we need to break value down into two key components.
First, value is created by the skills required to complete a job, such as a programmer鈥檚 ability to code or a painter鈥檚 knack at prepping a wall and applying paint cleanly. In general, we鈥檝e found that when skills are standardized, they are more likely to be threatened by automation or AI.
The second component of value, though, is separate from skills. It鈥檚 the method of delivering a job鈥檚 value to someone else, which can also be threatened by new technology. We call this 鈥渧alue form.鈥
For example, while a college professor鈥檚 skills and expertise in a particular domain may not be under immediate threat, the form in which their value is delivered is certainly threatened by and the increased use of .
By considering these two threats together, workers can better assess if their jobs are at risk.
Displaced Or Durable
Our framework has four categories: A job could be displaced, disrupted, deconstructed or durable depending on the level of threat facing its skills and value form.
Displaced signifies the jobs that are most in danger. Our analysis shows , and all belong in the displaced category.
Disrupted means the skills are highly threatened, but people desire the recognized or current method of delivery, which often involves a human interaction. Examples include fast food servers, and real estate agents.
Deconstructed flips those two around: The skills are hardly standardized but automation poses a serious threat to how the job鈥檚 value is delivered. Photographers, college professors and livery drivers are in this category.
Durable jobs are the safest ones because both the skills and the value form are difficult or costly to automate. Lucky workers in this category include electricians, plumbers and physician assistants.
What We Learn From Value
In some ways, the value framework confirms what others have found.
For example, no one would have argued that shelf stockers at big box retailers like Walmart would be a safe job for years to come 鈥 as the retailer鈥檚 announcement confirms. Putting them in our framework, their primary skills of keeping inventory stocked and shelves clean are severely threatened because they are standardized and routine.
Furthermore, robots can deliver more value through automated transmission of inventory information. Thus, our model shows these workers will most likely be displaced.
However, our focus on value suggests that other predictions based merely on categories of at-risk jobs may be missing the mark. For example, many jobs are threatened simply because they are routine, non-college-educated or blue-collar, like plumbers, electricians and hospice workers. Yet, rewiring an electrical system in a historic home or caring for a hospice patient are nonstandard jobs that require a human to create and deliver value, which is why these jobs can be quite durable.
What Workers Can Do
Once workers understand the value they create and the threat automation poses to their skills and value form, what actions can they take?
The common answer they鈥檝e been given thus far involves encouraging them to engage in . But a focus on value the way our model does provides much more nuanced guidance.
Workers in deconstructed jobs, for example, don鈥檛 need new skills. They just need to learn to adapt existing skills to new forms of delivery. Conversely, workers in disrupted jobs need training to work alongside robots and AI systems during periods of transition.
And even if displaced workers 鈥 a fate that is likely to be on the horizon for Walmart鈥檚 shelf stockers 鈥 need to consider retraining, the traditional higher education system is for the future of work. Universities focus on the longer-term bachelor鈥檚-to-master鈥檚 pathway. Rather, individuals need access to quick, modular and adaptable pathways to new jobs.
The 48-year-old parent who just lost his job as an accountant is not able to begin a new four-year degree program. But a three-month program to earn a cybersecurity certificate would be doable and all he needs.
The future of work is already here. Days after Walmart鈥檚 announcement, workers at Stop & Shop, a large regional grocery chain in the Boston area, are over increased automation. But we have time. Let鈥檚 worry less about robots and AI itself and more about the value workers can create in different jobs in a landscape that will continue to change for years to come. Value is the only constant.
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.