Straight Talk: AI Career Realities
Key Points
- Corporate communications about AI are often vague and formal, leaving employees without the clear, practical guidance they need to navigate AI-driven changes.
- Junior employees face a stark reality: they will either be seen as valuable fresh talent who can solve problems beyond AI tools, or they risk being placed on the “chopping block” if their contributions aren’t recognized.
- To avoid being viewed as replaceable by AI, juniors should proactively demonstrate problem‑solving abilities that cannot be duplicated by tools like ChatGPT, even if their tasks are framed as routine.
- Companies should redesign career ladders to assess and reward junior staff for their problem‑solving skills across functions—engineering, product, customer success—rather than merely measuring output volume.
Sections
- Straight Talk on AI Careers - The speaker criticizes vague corporate AI messaging and pledges candid, level‑specific guidance for junior, mid‑level, and senior employees navigating AI‑driven workplace transitions.
- Leveraging AI for Career Advancement - The speaker advises junior and mid‑career professionals to use AI to transition from simple production work to problem‑solving, showcase dramatically higher productivity, and swiftly deepen domain expertise to secure career growth.
- Seniors' Edge in AI Hiring - Companies are adjusting hiring practices to favor senior professionals with deep domain expertise, granting them greater leeway to learn AI rapidly and apply their extensive problem‑solving experience.
- Unfiltered Discussion on Systemic Fraud - The speaker announces a candid Substack piece exposing a widespread fraud problem that transcends any single company, urging listeners to engage in an honest, broader conversation.
Full Transcript
# Straight Talk: AI Career Realities **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F6rTh7d3CM](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F6rTh7d3CM) **Duration:** 00:10:30 ## Summary - Corporate communications about AI are often vague and formal, leaving employees without the clear, practical guidance they need to navigate AI-driven changes. - Junior employees face a stark reality: they will either be seen as valuable fresh talent who can solve problems beyond AI tools, or they risk being placed on the “chopping block” if their contributions aren’t recognized. - To avoid being viewed as replaceable by AI, juniors should proactively demonstrate problem‑solving abilities that cannot be duplicated by tools like ChatGPT, even if their tasks are framed as routine. - Companies should redesign career ladders to assess and reward junior staff for their problem‑solving skills across functions—engineering, product, customer success—rather than merely measuring output volume. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F6rTh7d3CM&t=0s) **Straight Talk on AI Careers** - The speaker criticizes vague corporate AI messaging and pledges candid, level‑specific guidance for junior, mid‑level, and senior employees navigating AI‑driven workplace transitions. - [00:03:36](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F6rTh7d3CM&t=216s) **Leveraging AI for Career Advancement** - The speaker advises junior and mid‑career professionals to use AI to transition from simple production work to problem‑solving, showcase dramatically higher productivity, and swiftly deepen domain expertise to secure career growth. - [00:06:54](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F6rTh7d3CM&t=414s) **Seniors' Edge in AI Hiring** - Companies are adjusting hiring practices to favor senior professionals with deep domain expertise, granting them greater leeway to learn AI rapidly and apply their extensive problem‑solving experience. - [00:10:07](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F6rTh7d3CM&t=607s) **Unfiltered Discussion on Systemic Fraud** - The speaker announces a candid Substack piece exposing a widespread fraud problem that transcends any single company, urging listeners to engage in an honest, broader conversation. ## Full Transcript
These are the things that I wish we told
employees more about AI. In other words,
there's a lot of corporate communication
going on about AI right now, but it's
not all upfront. And I think it doesn't
always help you in career growth. And
having seen a lot of juniors, a lot of
mid-career, a lot of senior folks
grappling with the realities of an AI
transition, what I'm realizing is
corporate communication is often very
formal and stilted. It doesn't give you
all the information you need. But
because I've seen so many of these
transitions at different scales, I can
give you a little bit of the
behindthescenes perspective to say this
is this is what should be said to you,
right? This is the reality. So with that
in mind, let me give you the straight
talk on what is really going on in the
middle of these AI transitions for each
of these job levels. I'm going to
address honest straight advice for
juniors. Things that you should be
hearing, maybe you're not, but you
should be. Same for mid-level, same for
seniors. This is really missing right
now. I don't hear it. I don't see it.
Most of the advice is generic. I'm going
to be really honest and really specific.
So, if you are getting started in your
career, let's say you're in your first
three years, maybe your first 5 years,
the thing that you need to hear that
most companies won't tell you is that
you are in one of two camps. Either you
are going to be treasured because you
are considered fresh blood and creative
and you work really hard or you're going
to be on the chopping block. And I know
a lot of folks out there who think
they're on the chopping block already,
not because the company's told them, but
because they've heard it on TikTok. The
reality is that the chopping block
happens because the company can't see
the value that you bring to the table.
And so the non-obvious piece here, the
thing that we don't talk about is how as
a junior you were able to show
problem-olving ability that makes the
company recognize you can't just do this
with chat GPT. And the trick is you kind
of have to make it up as a junior to
earn that in a lot of companies because
most companies frame junior level tasks
as produce this document, produce this
analysis, run this cash flow statement.
They're not framing them as challenging
tasks. And so they're opening the door
for you to be thinking about your work
as if it's AI replaceable. But it's not
if you actually understand what you're
doing. If you're actually given the
chance to do problem solving, you won't
look as AI replaceable. And so I say
that because one of the things I share
with companies is that you need to
rethink your career ladders. You need to
think about juniors differently because
juniors are problem solvers. They're
just problem solvers with less
experience. And you need to be assessing
them for problem solving ability.
Whether that's engineering problem
solving or product problem solving or
customer success problem solving, but
you're still looking at problem solving
ability. And if you want people to be
seniors in 10 years, you got to hire
them now. There's no other substitute
for that. And some companies are
figuring that out. Notably, actually,
very interestingly, Open AAI is figuring
that out. They are actively hiring
junior engineers. You might wonder why,
right? This is a company that presumably
uses AI incredibly well. What's it doing
that would make them feel like they need
junior engineers? They have found that
juniors are very very creative and
out-of-the-box thinkers on AI and that
they need that particular
problem-solving talent because seniors
tend to get more stuck in their ways.
Seniors tend to find a particular way
they like to solve problems and they
just apply AI to that and that's what
they do and they want that mix where
they have the fresh blood and the fresh
thinking. If open AI can think about it
that way, everybody can think about it
that way. And so I think the trick if
you are in a junior role is to start to
as actively and aggressively as you can
push across the spectrum, right? You're
on a spectrum from I just produce stuff
to I solve problems. You want to be
pushing as hard as you can toward
problem solving. And if you're not, like
if you're stuck on the production side,
the only option you have is to show that
you are 10 or 20x more productive at
producing stuff using AI. So like
prompts for producing spreadsheets that
I've done or Excel or whatever it is
that you're working on, show that with
AI, you can do so much more. And that
becomes a way for you to sort of secure
some career stability even if the
company hasn't figured out that your
real value is over on the problem
solving side. Let's move to mid-career.
If you're looking at a mid-career role,
what you should be thinking about is how
can I very rapidly develop deeper and
richer domain expertise. Typically, we
think if we're mid-career, call it 5 to
10 years in, we want to be developing
skills that would get us to senior
level. The skills piece is easier to get
nowadays because of AI, but the domain
piece, the expertise piece is rarer and
harder to get. And so, if you're looking
for something that sort of gives you
sense of stability, a sense of hope,
etc., you want to be doubling down on
the particular niche that you're in.
Now, I know not everybody's in a niche
that they're happy with. I have no
illusions about that. I've talked with a
lot of folks who are very unhappy.
Sometimes they're unhappy with you're
unhappy with job roll, right? You're
unhappy with the particular niche you're
in. Maybe it's fintech, maybe it's
gaming, whatever it is. I get it. The
reality is, as difficult as that is,
that domain expertise represents years
of accumulated experience that
differentiate you from juniors. And you
don't want to let that go lightly, even
if you don't love it. And so, a smarter
way to transition is to start to look at
an adjacent role or domain that carries
with it some credit for the expertise
you have and make a gentle hop. Making a
big hop right now as a mid-career person
is much, much riskier. You don't know
where you're going to land. You don't
know if you'll be given credit for your
years of experience. Now, if we go back
to the skill side, I talked about skills
as something that's easier to develop.
One of the ways that you can show that
is by mapping out your own skill
trajectory, particularly in terms of
problem solving with AI. If you were
mid-career, you should be able to say,
"This is how I'm proactively socializing
my prompts. This is how I'm proactively
talking with the rest of the group about
task decomposition so I can pass stuff
to AI. This is how I'm verifying my AI
outputs." These are things that were
previously only usable for machine
learning engineers, right? But now
everybody has to do them because we have
LLMs. And at the mid level, you're going
to just be expected to know them.
There's not really another substitute
for that. If we move to seniors, the
thing to capture is that seniors have
the most grace on AI right now. you I
actually know of companies that are
changing their hiring practices to not
assess for AI because they don't want to
miss seniors. Seniors have systems
understanding. They have deep experience
10 to 15 years or more. And this is true
whether you're a very experienced PM or
an engineer or a CS lead or a sales
lead. You're very deep in your space,
right? People desperately need that
experience. And so I hear a lot from
folks who have some gray hairs like me
and they wonder what is going to happen
to me. I feel like I'm so experienced
that people won't give me a shot. I
think it's encouraging to know that
people are really reframing their hiring
practices to require less AI of seniors
so they can bring them in because they
know that seniors can learn the AI and
they'll have the wealth of domain
expertise and the problem solving
experience and everything else that goes
with being a senior and be able to apply
it to AI very very rapidly. And that is
encouraging, right? That is encouraging
if you're someone who's trying to figure
out how to make that transition because
it means that you have a little bit more
grace and people are trusting you more.
Like mid-level folks, you need to be
leaning in on the experience that you
have. Unlike mid-level folks, you get
some credit for problem solving ability
and sort of articulating things from a
uh problem framing and solutioning
perspective. and your previous
experience at standing up things
independently and building systems, all
of that you get credit for because
you've done it before and you've done it
without AI. And so people are just sort
of assuming you can start to lean in and
essentially do that with AI. And that's
exactly what we see when Open AI going
back to their hiring plan also hire
super senior people. They want people
who are deeply experienced who use AI as
well because you can supercharge your
own problem solving experience for
decades with AI. Now, the best
organizations have a mix of levels. And
I'm just going to say it plainly. If
you're in hiring and you're not hiring
for a mix of levels, you're missing out.
And if you think you need justification,
just point to OpenAI. They're hiring for
a mix of levels. It's what the best
people are doing. And if you're worried
that you are not going to be able to
figure it out or be able to make the
transition, I hope that this video has
helped you to name both your level and
some of the specific tricks and
techniques that you need to use. I'm
talking very specifically because I
think people get lost in the sauce,
right? People think I'm a junior. I need
to have a very active GitHub. I didn't
say that, right? I'm a mid-career
person. I need to have a personal
portfolio website. I also didn't say
that. What I'm trying to show you is how
you apply your particular experience set
to the larger challenge of showing you
can solve problems for the business
because that is what you will be
rewarded on. And AI is just a tool to do
that. And I want to give you a sense
that is taken literally from my
conversation with Fortune 100 leaders,
conversations I've had with
entrepreneurs. I see a real range of
scales. These are the things leaders are
thinking and talking about. These are
the skills that are being looked for.
This is not usually talked about this
frankly. And so I wanted you to have it.
I hope it's helpful for you. Um and I've
obviously written up some more sort of
in-depth on the Substack on this because
I think it's a really important
conversation. We need to have like an
honest fireside chat that is not just
what the company can tell you because
this is a really fraud issue. It's much
bigger than what one company has. So, I
hope this is helpful. Good luck uh with
your career. other.