Most people’s idea of productivity is to be able to produce a lot of something. To do a lot. Follow a series of steps, and you’re done. Do it over and over again.
But, more and more, if it can be completed in a series of steps, there’s no point in doing it. AI and automation are poised to eliminate forty to fifty percent of jobs within the next decade or two. It’s the jobs in which people follow a series of steps that are the most at-risk. AI expert Kai-Fu Lee says it’s the “optimization-based” jobs that will be taken over first. Jobs such as loan underwriters, customer service representatives, even radiologists. Jobs that involve what Lee calls “narrow tasks,” such as finding the ideal rate for an insurance premium, maximizing a tax refund, or diagnosing an illness. Tasks involving optimizing data will be the first to go.