Fortune | FORTUNE 10月09日 23:21
AI浪潮下,传统职业技能面临挑战与新机遇
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文章探讨了人工智能对传统职业技能带来的冲击。Stripe的AI高管Emily Glassberg Sands指出,尽管AI正在取代部分初级职位,公司反而增加了对拥有前沿技能的新毕业生的招聘。然而,她也对传统软件工程人才的未来发展表示担忧,并强调了导师制和人才管道的重要性。文章进一步指出,随着AI能力的增强,许多曾经被视为专业技能的工作正变得可被自动化,例如设计、数据科学和工程等领域。LinkedIn CEO也预测,未来求职者更需要具备适应性、前瞻性思维和拥抱AI工具的能力,而非仅仅依赖传统技能。银行CEO也认同AI对技能相关性的影响,认为许多硬技能正变得过时,学习如何思考和适应新工具更为关键。

🎓 AI正改变人才需求,初级职位面临风险,但拥有前沿技能的新生代人才(尤其是博士毕业生)受到青睐。Stripe的AI高管Emily Glassberg Sands表示,公司正在招聘比以往更多的新毕业生,因为他们具备最新的技能、新鲜的想法以及掌握最新工具的能力。然而,她也对传统软件工程领域的入门级职位表示担忧,AI和聊天机器人可能会取代这些岗位,从而影响初级人才的职业发展和经验积累,并对未来的导师和人才输送管道造成潜在威胁。

💡 传统专业技能的价值受到AI的挑战。文章指出,设计、数据科学、工程等领域之所以存在,是因为它们曾需要专门的技能。但现在,AI能够增强甚至完成许多这类专业任务,这使得“技能时代”面临被颠覆的风险。LinkedIn CEO Ryan Roslansky也警告,未来的求职者需要具备适应性、前瞻性思维和拥抱AI工具的能力,而不是仅仅依赖传统的编码、财务分析或文档撰写等技能。

🔄 适应性与学习能力成为未来职场的核心竞争力。面对AI的崛起,传统的硬技能正在迅速贬值。银行CEO Bill Winters的经历表明,即使拥有名校学位和广泛的商业知识,其学习到的能力也在AI驱动的世界中逐渐失去相关性。因此,未来成功的关键在于个体能否快速学习、适应新工具和工作方式,并展现出灵活应变的能力,这正成为推动职业生涯发展的关键要素。

“I’m actually hiring more new grads—now, they’re largely new grad PhDs—but more new grads than ever before,” Emily Glassberg Sands recently said on the Forward Future podcast. “Because they have the cutting edge skills, and they come in with fresh ideas, and they know how to think, and they know how to use the latest tools.”

The Stripe leader said she is concerned about the talent pipeline for traditional software engineering. Companies like Goldman Sachs and Salesforce have been replacing the essential role with AI, and Glassberg Sands questioned how undergraduates in the field will find opportunities they need to climb the ladder. Those entry-level jobs are most at-risk with AI agents and chatbots in the picture—and some leaders like Anthropic’s Dario Amodei and Google X’s former chief business officer Mo Gawdat have warned that the advanced tech will trigger a white-collar jobs armageddon. Glassberg Sands is holding out hope that frontline employees will be safe from the cull, but as more human skills are targeted for automation, there could be drastic effects on the careers of recent grads. 

“On the lower end, there’s a set of jobs that we will always want humans to do. There are [a] set of service-oriented things that are very human in nature,” Stripe’s AI executive continues. “On the white collar side, the part I’m sweating is: What does entry level look like? How do people get the experience to work their way up?”

“I’m most worried about mentorship development. It would be unfortunate if we woke up in 10 years with no pipeline.”

The era of skills is under threat of AI 

Billion-dollar companies like Workday and JPMorgan have switched to skills-based hiring in order to find top talent with the most advanced expertise, regardless of college degrees. But with AI in the picture, leaders are ringing the alarm bells that the era of skills may be over—and Glassberg Sands is seeing the shift first-hand. 

“Why does design exist, data science exist, engineering exist? Those functions exist because they required specialized skills,” Glassberg Sands explained in the podcast. “But increasingly, a bunch of these specialized skills are augmentable or doable by AI.”

The CEO of LinkedIn—one of the world’s largest employment platforms—has also warned Gen Z that it’ll get even tougher to make it in this evolving labor market. Ryan Roslansky cautioned that instead of chasing candidates with Ivy League degrees or traditional skills, employers will be on the hunt for AI-savvy talent with the adaptability to keep up with the new ways of working.

Roslansky predicted the job applicants most likely to land a job and succeed in their roles won’t be the ones relying on their traditional skillset. Knowing how to code, crunch financial figures, draft slideshows, or balance a tax sheet is no longer the ticket to landing a six-figure job. Instead, he said those who succeed will be “the people who are adaptable, forward thinking, ready to learn, and ready to embrace these tools…It really kind of opens up the playing field in a way that I think we’ve never seen before.”

Meanwhile Bill Winters, the CEO of $40 billion bank Standard Chartered, agreed that AI has had a major impact on the relevance of skills. Now that chatbots can compile documents, create meeting slideshows, and even write code, many hard capabilities like software engineering skills once seen as a career gold mine are now being rendered redundant. Even though the chief executive has multiple degrees—including an MBA from Wharton Business School—the business abilities he was taught have been losing their relevancy in an increasingly AI-driven world. 

“I learned how to think at university, and for the 40 years since I left university, those skills have been degraded, degraded, degraded,” Winters told Bloomberg in a June interview

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AI 职业技能 人才市场 未来工作 技能时代 人工智能 Future of Work Skills Gap AI Impact Career Development
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