AI & the Future of Work: Navigating Careers in the Algorithmic Era
By Sunil Casuba
Summary
## Key takeaways - **AI's economic benefits outweigh job loss fears.**: The narrative around AI's negative impact on jobs and energy consumption is largely incorrect. AI offers significant benefits across energy, transportation, manufacturing, agriculture, and healthcare, each representing trillions in global economic savings by reducing waste. [05:24], [06:05] - **Entry-level jobs in AI-exposed fields are declining.**: Research indicates a significant decline in entry-level employment within AI-exposed sectors like software development and customer service. This trend is less pronounced for experienced workers or those in less AI-exposed roles. [10:06], [10:45] - **Embrace change and continuous learning for career growth.**: In a rapidly evolving environment, the most crucial skills are the ability to learn quickly and embrace change. Staying stable is impossible; instead, focus on seeking opportunities within change to remain successful. [15:54], [16:20] - **Show, don't just tell, your skills.**: With AI capable of generating impressive resumes, the best way to stand out is by demonstrating practical experience. Creating and launching an app, even a simple one, in your field provides tangible proof of your abilities. [17:17], [17:43] - **Reinterpret your skills, don't just upskill linearly.**: AI is fundamentally restructuring the global economy. Instead of merely adding AI skills to existing roles, individuals should re-evaluate their entire skill set and approach their careers with a fresh perspective to identify new possibilities. [21:30], [21:41] - **Build a personal brand in a globalized economy.**: In today's brutal and competitive global economy, job security comes from being an expert recognized worldwide. Develop and package your personal brand so people know you exist and what you offer, rather than relying solely on a resume after losing a job. [34:44], [35:01]
Topics Covered
- Does AI create more jobs than it destroys?
- AI is eroding entry-level job opportunities.
- What skills will future-proof your career?
- Reinterpret your skills, don't just upskill.
- Your personal brand is your new job security.
Full Transcript
Thank you everybody. Please get
comfortable, find a spot um or stand if
you like. That's fine. Thank you so much
for joining us and welcome to AI in the
future of work. Um really appreciate you
guys taking a few moments staying with
us here tonight. It's been a long week,
we know, but um really appreciate it and
we're grateful for that. Uh if I haven't
met you yet, my name is Ramsey Elder. I
am the co-founder of Biopul Talent.
We're a recruiting firm located here in
the Bay Area. Um, but work all across
the United States and we're all about
empowering careers and elevation teams.
So, we make sure that everybody thrives
and grows and works together and gets to
where they want to be. Um, very excited
to be here and co-hosting this event
with my really good friend Sil Cassuba.
Um, really funny story actually. Well,
actually, he's also our moderator for
the evening. So, thank you for that.
uh really funny story there. Not a funny
story, but he reached out to me on
LinkedIn. We haven't met before yet, but
he was like, "Hey, I'm good. Coming in
from New York. Let's get some coffee.
Let's meet real quick." And we did that
and um now we're here. We had we kind of
bounced some ideas off each other.
Thought this would be a great idea. And
it's really cool to see this come to
fruition and we're really grateful for
that. Um with that, yes, get
comfortable. Looks like you guys are.
That's fine. Um, I want to introduce you
guys to Lauren Louie right here. Uh,
Lauren is a founder herself, content
creator, and she's actually in the
running for the Forbes 30 under 30 list
at the moment. So, you might see her
around.
>> Yes. Very confident.
Um, you might see her around taking
pictures, videos. Um, so don't be shy.
Say hi. And if you're comfortable, uh,
she might ask you for a little
testimonial of the evening and how it
went. So, um, also everything that she
records tonight, all the content is
going to be sent to all your emails. So,
please don't feel like you need to
record anything. Just be in the moment,
enjoy it, and meet some new people. And
with that, I want to pass it over to
Sil.
>> Hi everyone. How's it going? Thanks for
joining us here on Friday. Uh, I know
it's the almost the end of tech week. I
know you probably had other options, but
I'm glad you know you came here. made
the right decision obviously. Um, so
yeah, today we want to talk about, you
know, let me introduce myself a little
bit too. My name is Silasa and I run
Smart Talent AI. As the name implies,
we're a talent organization. Uh we're an
AI consulting firm and uh yeah like like
Ramsey was saying we met for coffee a
couple months ago and uh we're like hey
let's you know there's there's a lot of
hype about AI and like the workplace and
how it's affecting you know uh you know
future jobs right so let's let's let's
get together get some brilliant minds
together to talk about this topic and
here we are today so I'm glad you're all
part of this and I'm glad uh you know we
got these guys here together so I want
to introduce uce our wonderful panelists
that have joined us today. Um so Bar
Chander here if you want to just wave
he is an economist and a researcher from
Stanford University not terribly far
away. He's put out an excellent research
uh study uh around this topic which
we'll definitely get into today. Um and
uh you know he he's coming at it from an
economist and research angle which I
think will be very beneficial to this
conversation. So thank you again brother
B for joining Janade um Janed is a kind
of trade you know jack of all trades
he's worked in cyber security and AI
deep tech um smart cities you name it
he's been in government and he has a
very practitioners view of uh how we can
apply AI these days um so loving uh that
he's here as well to join this
conversation and then last but obviously
not least Dimmitro uh is here from the
mount uh from uh the Silicon Valley area
as well. He is a certainly a uh great AI
practitioner and he's been uh exploring
with AI, robotics and several different
technologies over the last several years
and uh we're just lucky to have these
three brilliant minds here together
today. So, thank you for joining us
today. Um,
so I'm going to start off with a
question that is, I think, on everyone's
minds, including mine, for sure. Um,
it's it's kind of a overarching question
that I think would be a great start to
this conversation. And Janate, I I think
you drew the short straw, so I'm gonna
I'm gonna pick on you first and but I
want everyone involved obviously. Um, so
obviously, you know, AI like is it like
what do we think about how it's
affecting our economy from a job market
standpoint? We'd love to hear, you know,
your general thoughts on the job market
and AI and uh yeah, we can go from there
and then we'd love to
>> uh yeah
question
I mean, so uh I think there's two
important things I want to uh talk about
and it has to do with the negativity
around AI. And the two most negative
points on AI is a it's taking jobs away
and that's all it's going to do. And the
second thing that's very negative about
AI is it's going to consume a lot of
energy and wipe out human you know and
if you look at all the press it's either
around uh job loss or energy consumption
and the thing I wanted to say is those
are both incorrect for uh one structural
reasons and technology reasons.
If you look at AI, the benefit to the
macro economy is huge in five important
areas. Energy consumption,
transportation manufacturing
agriculture, and healthcare. And let me
give you a plain English example of all
five. Uh starting with energy around the
world, you know, people use electricity
and we have buildings where the lights
are turned on even when there's nobody
there. We have buildings that are airond
conditioned that are when they're
they're empty. So using smart energy
where it's able to manage the use of
energy is a win for all of us, right?
Because this is wasted energy. So AI's
value there is huge. Let's talk about
transportation. We've got a billion cars
in the world and at any one point a car
is stuck behind a red light when there's
no other cars in the intersection. Using
AI to let cars go through is a win for
all of us because right now cars are
stuck in traffic for no reason. If you
look at manufacturing,
uh we have product losses uh from
manufacturing defects which AI can fix.
Uh if you look at uh health care, AI is
be able to look at clinical data and now
create uh custom uh programs for you in
terms of pharmaceuticals, right? And
then finally, if we look at agriculture,
AI and robotics is being used to find
weeds to remove them from a farm without
pesticides. If you look at all of these
five cases, each one represents about a
trillion dollars in savings to the
global economy. And this is a trillion
dollars from waste that you know a car
that sits idle doesn't help us as
humanity, right? Also all five areas are
example of distributed AI not AI running
in a gigantic data center. This is AI
running at the edge. So if you look at
all of the work in Silicon Valley from
open AI rock to um meta. Uh each one of
them has deployed downloadable AI edge
models that do not run in a big data
center. So the reason I wanted to share
these five examples from you, these five
building blocks
uh touch all of our lives and are
foundational to the global economy. AI
in on average is representing a1
trillion dollar improvement in these
different spaces. So if you look at the
global economy, you know, depending how
you count it, roughly 300 billion, oh
sorry, 300 trillion, uh United States is
three uh 30 trillion out of the uh 300
trillion or I think
I think it's 60 trillion. So those
infrastructure investments help all of
us as a global society. And then out of
that you say well that's great. How does
that help the companies here? Out of
those productivity gains the rest of the
economy benefits. If you're supplying in
manufacturing, if you're working in
healthcare, if you're working in travel
and this I think is where you're going
to see huge uh new jobs being created.
So I think the key for all of us is a to
understand the macro view of what's
happening globally and how AI will shift
the global economy in a better direction
and then closer to what you guys do
which is like okay with this global
shift how does a company create a
strategy how do you hire what's your
thing but I think the key thing is uh
things are going to uh radically change
but I think we should all realize and
focus on the the growth area and not get
too um uh caught up in the job loss or
the big data center. I think those are
much more transitory. So yeah, that's uh
so hopefully that makes sense. I person
would love to hear the other very smart
people here.
>> Thank you J. Yeah, if you want to from
your angle.
>> Great. Thanks. Uh I I think that's a
very helpful start. So I'm going to just
I guess give a brief overview of our
research and what we found. So there's
been a lot of speculation about how AI
might affect jobs obviously uh
especially for entry- level workers.
There's been some kind of speculation
that the entry- level job market has
been deteriorating because of in part
because of AI. So we wanted to bring
some hard data to this and the way we
did that is we use this partnership with
a company called ADP which is largest
payroll software provider in the United
States and via this partnership we could
track employment for millions of workers
across the US economy uh basically in
real time. Our data goes through July
2025. So we wanted to kind of dig into
the numbers here and see what was
happening for employment for different
types of workers. And we did in fact
find that for entry-level workers in
these more AI exposed jobs such as
software development, customer service,
etc., the job market is pretty
significantly declined. And you don't
see that for young workers in jobs that
are less exposed to AI. And you don't
see that for more experienced workers,
you know, kind of regardless of whether
they're in more AI exposed jobs or less
AI exposed jobs. So, of course, there
are a lot of alternative explanations
for why this might be happening. You
know, you could think of tech over
hiring, return from work from home, you
know, maybe education is deteriorating,
etc. So, we we tested a lot of these
alternatives. We get similar results if
we take out the tech sector, take out
computer jobs, uh only look at jobs that
can't be worked remotely, uh look at
college graduates, non-ol graduates,
etc. So, we did a lot of alternative
analyses to kind of test these results
and they were pretty robust. we were
still finding this relationship between
entry level employment in AI exposed
jobs and declining employment over the
past couple years. Now I do want to
emphasize uh that we don't know that
these trends are going to continue going
forward. Historically technology has you
know destroyed a lot of jobs. It's also
created new work. That's why today the
unemployment rate is under 5%. is
because all the new technologies that
have replaced prior work have also
created new work or created new demand
for existing work that have enabled
people to find new work and you know
there might have been displacement from
se some sectors but new demand created
in other sectors consequently so the
question is really will AI be different
than prior technologies
uh you know will they will it continue
to create new forms of work where people
can continue to find you know gainful
employment or will additional work
that's created also be start to be done
by AI and I think that's a very open
question we don't know one way or the
other uh and you know we need to
continue to track these things on an
ongoing basis to understand that
>> thank you
let me give my very practical
perspective on
um on all of these aspects um one add a
little bit more to any examples where AI
will will benefit the society in short
term and in fact it's already
benefiting. Um I hope you have noticed
that that the vehicles on on the road u
are getting much safer every single year
and and that trend will continue to
happen. At this point of time the
manufacturers already exhausted majority
of the opportunities to make them safe
safer from mechanical perspective. So
where they go? They go into into the
software. They're going into active
safety features
and uh
many new vehicles on the road already
have have those features and they are
saving lives right now. Uh this trend is
going to continue and AI is going is
going to help with that too.
Um going back to the comment of uh the
hiring process, I can tell you in
exactly what happens in my particular
situation. I'm a hiring manager. I um I
have the decision power and at this
point of time I I tend not to hire new
talent uh not to hire the uh
the young talent. The reasons for that
is is not AI. I don't have any fears of
of AI. The reasons are uh purely
economical at this point in time. It um
it is it is a time of certain
uncertainty
and uh uncertainty
times to squeeze budgets on all levels
and uh and that forces those type of
decisions. I believe this is temporary.
This is going to end. And also I believe
that uh that the companies overall
should actually take more responsibility
to society and and uh and hire more
young people. Thank you.
>> Thank you all for that. Um so I want to
kind of piggyback on a couple of things
that I just heard. So, uh, Deitra, I
thought you had a really good take or
good interesting take on on, you know,
as a hiring manager, your perspective on
hiring, uh, early career professionals.
I guess on that note, I would love to
hear from the three of you, especially
because we have a lot of young
professionals here. What would your
advice be for them in this era? Um, as
far as what degrees to pursue, you know,
looks like you're ready to go. So,
>> very good question.
There are two things that I'm asking
everyone during the job interview and
I'm personally doing the
the cultural interviews for the entire
company and uh there are two things that
I deeply care about. One is uh how
people learn, how fast can they learn
because no matter uh how good the person
is, you still need to learn on a job a
lot really really a lot. Your baseline
is is very important. Your background is
important. But the most important thing
is how fast can you learn? That's thing
number one. Thing number two is uh what
is your attitude towards the change? Do
you embrace the change? Do you seek
opportunities in the change? Or you
don't like the change? You fear the
change and and you want to stay stable
in in my environment. uh staying stable
is is simply impossible because uh the
company is running very very fast and
building things and uh unfortunately
people who who like stability will not
be successful. I'm sure there are many
organizations that are not like that. uh
but uh in in case when when change is
inevitable
um people need to learn how to deal with
that.
Uh so my big advice to young people
especially if they're in school or
university is try to create an app, put
it out there uh because AI has become
lethal in generating
uh resumes that aren't real. And one of
the things the the only countermeasure
to that is um really being able to show
something. And it is so easy to create
an app these days. It is so inexpensive
to launch it. Do it in your field. You
know, show that you are a fullstack
developer. So when you meet someone like
Demetri
and he says, "What what have you done?"
They can say, "Yeah." He said, "Look,
I've actually done this and look, it's
live. It's online. You can uh" and I I
think that makes a big difference where
they can actually point to the work
versus just saying they're a full
Everybody says they're a full stack
developer. Everybody says they know how
to use Grock and OpenAI. Everybody says
they know how to download llama and do
it and they know these models but I mean
you know you say it but show it and and
I think that is a good way to
differentiate yourself and have a better
interview especially with a tough guy
like this. I mean I'd be scared
I'd leave the interview.
>> Uh I I actually want to uh just kind of
second the two points that were made
right now. I I agree that it's easier
today to build something from scratch
than it's ever been in history. And I
think especially for the type of person
who comes to SF Tech Week, uh you know,
I would encourage you to do that. I
think uh there's a lot of opportunity
that didn't exist in the past and it's
important to try to make use of that,
gain some experience building something.
I would certainly uh you know, second
those ideas.
>> Thank you all. Um another question I
have around this topic but more uh you
know with a practical application to it.
I'm curious for all your takes on so
clearly you know we're talking about
entry- level jobs and you know how AI
could be potentially an accelerator uh
if you know applied in that direction of
course um so we hear a lot about AI and
upskilling right and that that's kind of
the buzzword now which you know even
just some conversation I was having
before we started talking today that
that was brought up do you all think
given you know the the displacement
issues that are occurring in specific
fields
uh that upskilling can alone fill you
know fill this gap or fill this void or
do you think we need more systemic
changes? I know I know it's a pretty
broad question and depends on the
industry but I'm just kind of curious on
your take on the strategy companies need
to be facing uh or employing rather uh
when it comes to uh you know upskilling.
So that
>> I think we're still very much in the
early days of understanding this. And I
think part of the reason for that is we
don't quite know yet and we haven't
developed the tools yet for
understanding how AI can help people do
this kind of upskilling. You know, one
of the reasons that I got very
interested in AI is that I started using
it to learn and I, you know, I was
learning all about like neural networks
and learning about how the transformer
models work and it was just insanely
good at helping me learn that like I
could ask any question and get a perfect
answer immediately and that is something
that has never existed before. And I
think we are still trying to understand
how we can use these technologies to
help people learn very quickly. And it's
possible that as we develop tools to
speed up education and streamline
people's ability to learn, it can really
help people upskill much more quickly
than they're currently doing. And I
think we're still in the very early
stages of understanding, you know, if
and how that might happen.
Uh I think the the problem with the word
upskilling uh it talks about a linear
relationship that you're doing something
today then you added AI and you're doing
the same thing with AI. I think that's
too narrow and too tight. I think AI is
actually radically restructuring our
global economy. As I mentioned it's
going to happen at a foundational level
in the transportation, agriculture,
medical, uh healthcare. I mean these are
huge and that's going to ripple through
the economy. What I'd like people to
think about is actually reinterpreting
yourself. That is take all the skills
you've built up in your education and
your job then look at AI and then take a
clean sheet approach to yourself and uh
a small plug here. Uh so I've been
working with Sunil on u creating a
generative AI app that actually does
that. So we we have a alpha version. and
it basically takes your uh background
and then it reinterprets it and it's a
kind of generation one but the the
results are pretty powerful and I really
think people really need to look at
themselves as a basket of skills that
through AI they can do many other things
not saying oh I worked at a factory and
I'm going to work at a factory with AI
that's too narrow and I I think you're
just asking for trouble so you know the
econ economy is going to make a radical
shift.
Give yourself the most options.
>> Yeah, I fully agree with that. So if you
um if you face uncertainty, you may want
to stop hyperspecializing and maybe look
wide
and uh that will allow you to get more
options potentially.
I will likely say it over and over over
again. The first thing that everybody
needs to do is is not to have any fear
because fear stopped stops us uh from
thinking.
And uh I think we began our conversation
on the note that there are a lot of uh
negative press about AI and and the
reason for that is that negative press
actually get gets more attention then
they get they got more views uh they got
more money. Uh the reality is uh is
actually very different and uh only only
those people who will actively seek
opportunities because these are the
opportunities of a lifetime.
Such technological advancement may
actually never happen within the next
100 years. We don't know that. So
embrace this opportunity. See how you
can uh ride this wave.
Thank you.
>> So, I wanted to migrate a little bit to
midle, but before I do that, um I know
there's a number of young professionals
right here. So, I wanted to see if
there's a question from any of our or
entry level professionals uh here that,
you know, while we're on this topic want
to ask a question or want to agree or
disagree with any of the points or
don't be shy.
I'm not young, but
>> you definitely are.
>> I don't have a job.
>> You need a
>> something that I'm interested
>> something I'm like I'm interested to
throw into the mix is since the
industrial revolution. So I was recently
in Mumbai of all places and got asked to
speak at a conference about the future
of employment and the future of
recruitment and everyone's paralyzed
with fear because the reality is you
don't need people driving cars or
lawnmowers or cleaning or building or
doing any of that stuff.
And Janade, you and I were at that
vianese restaurant down in San Jose
one night talking about this this
existential crisis of in our lives we
aspire to get to a point where we can be
a self-funded retiree. Let us say like
you know you've got enough assets and
enough money and enough means that you
can
um support yourself. And yet since the
industrial revolution, all we've done is
find different and more complex ways to
spend 80 hours a week working in jobs
that we don't like. So what I throwing
out like a like an actual existential
question. Where's the bit where all the
technological innovation that we tell
ourselves is making us more efficient
when we've got elevators and high-rise
buildings and travelers and Whimos
and yet then someone goes to the gym 2
hours after work cuz they didn't take
the stairs and our parents are in age
care and our children are in daycare and
like I think the real challenge is we
have economic models driving this not
like social
models and I just want to throw that
into the conversation. Because there's
an assumption that everyone has to have
a job. I would like to take that like AI
has and trash it and say, couldn't we
all just work one day a week and then go
and do actual good things and be with
our kids and our parents and our friends
and and like this just this underlying
assumption that you have to work. Like
surely we've created a technology bigger
than God now. Seriously.
>> And that is trying to find ways for us
to work for it. It just seems like a a
human created nonsense and I just wanted
to be controversial and get that
conversation going.
>> I'd like to thank Corey who's running
for the presidents of France position
now that the president got kicked out
and and uh he's now promoting one day a
week work versus four. So that that's
his platform. You heard it right there.
Uh I think there is a downside to the
global economy that Corey pointed out
which is harsh. That is number one we
are in a global economy. It doesn't
matter where you live or work you're
competing with everybody else on the
planet on where you live and work. And
you know going back to when I meet young
people you know I do talk about the
opportunity but the downside or the
opposite side of the coin or the knife
is we are in a global economy. And what
this really means is you've got to be
very good at what you do. Uh there is no
free ride whether you live in the United
States, India or China. And we see this
right? So pick something you love
whatever it is mathematics, science,
medicine.
Something you love that you are happy to
do it every day irrespective of your
salary low or high or free because it's
going to go up and down but because you
love it you're in it. And then that is
something you become better at. This
notion of having a job and a career, I
think sadly from a global structural
perspective is gone. I think I I'm not
an economist, but I really think it's an
aspect of after the Second World War, we
had a period of stability and you could
have the career job in Japan or in
America, and now that's replaced with a
fluid, competitive environment that is
very brutal and very mean to not just
young people, but anybody. So, the only
safety you have is that you're very good
at something, whatever it is. Maybe
you're interested in food, maybe you're
interested in art, maybe you're
interested in agriculture. And you just
get really good at that and you use AI
to amplify that. Uh, and you help people
in different ways. And that is your job
security. And I I think that's one of
the new realities uh, young people face,
but also all of us face.
>> Yeah. Thanks. Uh, I fully agree with
with everything. I just want to add in
order to become great at anything you
need to spend time and and energy.
How do you do it? You you need to pick
something that you will like and it will
just come automatically. I personally
was blessed to pick my profession early
on um way before college. uh but uh I
have seen many people like my kids for
example they don't they don't know what
what they're going to be and that's one
of the biggest shortcomings
um because finding yourself finding
something that is aspirational to you uh
finding um
a job that uh will not just give you
money but give you joy And happiness is
uh is probably the most important part
because eventually no matter what this
job is, you will become great at it. And
when you become great at it, it will be
extremely hard for any new technologies
including AI to displace you.
In uh the 1930s, a very famous economist
named John Maynard Kanes actually said
that he expected by the time his
children had grown up that we would all
be working 15-hour work weeks. And uh it
turned out that he was very wrong about
that. The the reason he thought that is
because you know the economy grows over
time and he expected that by the time
that we reach some some level of
consumption some level of material
um you know goods that we can produce
for ourselves that people won't want to
work as much and it turned out that that
was not true. We have become far richer
than we were back then in the 1930s
especially at the upper end. You know
people are way richer than they used to
be back then. You can purchase all sorts
of goods that were not possible at that
time, but people still work and people
choose to do that. Now, sociologically,
like is it good that they're doing that?
Uh why are they choosing to do that
instead of just retiring? I think is a
very interesting question. But, you
know, historically that's been the case
that even as new technologies come out,
even as we become richer, people find
ways to occupy their time via formal
employment. And you know, is that going
to continue going forward? Is that like
normatively the correct thing that
should be happening? I I'm not sure, but
uh you know, it doesn't necessarily have
to be that way.
>> Thanks all. I really appreciate this. I
know we can probably have a conversation
around just this topic for the entire
night, but just to keep things moving, I
do want to ask one more question of the
panelists and then I want to hand it
over to you all because I think you all
have very interesting insights to share
as well. Um, obviously we've talked a
lot about entry level roles. Um, but I
would love to hear and you know this is
a little selfish of me because I'm also
mid-level now and I try not to remind
myself of that a lot but I guess I am
now. Um what would you guys recommend
for mid-level professionals that you
know are going through this
transformation after having worked you
know 15 20 years in a in a career or
careers uh you know without automation
as easy as it is today. uh what would
you uh suggest to those folks that are
suddenly seeing you know their jobs
radically changing at some you know with
with with certain aspects of that uh
being true um I'll hand it over to you
>> there's two things I'll say about this I
think uh one in terms of your own
professional development and skill
development and things like that I think
there's a lot of things that AI can
obviously not do right now and that's a
lot of you know working together with
other people understanding the needs of
the business collaborating with
different people and understanding the
requirements
uh you know a lot of the implementation
as well but I I think this kind of like
management up and down and understanding
the different needs are things that
people especially in the middle layer
are uniquely well suited to do now I
think so I think continuing to cultivate
those skills is likely quite important
you know the things that differentiate
humans from AI as it is right now for
sure. I think cultivating those skills
is quite important and then I think on
the other side uh in terms of
you know how it relates to hiring and
things like that you know a lot of these
people are the ones who are hiring the
entry- level workers and I would I think
encourage people to think about more
creative ways to use young people at
work. I don't think necessarily, you
know, if we do progress to a world where
AI is replacing a lot of the work that
entry level people have been doing in in
these jobs historically, like I think we
should think of more creative ways of
hiring and developing and using them at
work than, you know, maybe we've been
doing more recently.
I I think the challenge for uh mid-level
people is uh similar to the very young
people I just mentioned. We're in a
global economy. So there is no job
security. Even if the people you work
for like you and you like them, in a
global economy, any company can be wiped
out by any other econom uh country. And
we see that uh you know whether or not
you like President Trump's tariffs. It
did start because people in foreign
countries were wiping out American
companies. So, President Trump
retaliated. Of course, that's creating
other problems. But the lesson for us is
the uh underpriced export was pretty
aggressive to start with. So, where does
this take the mid-level executive?
Because I know people are losing their
jobs around the world. I think your only
job security ends up being your own
brand that people know you're an expert
in something not only in the country you
live in but around the world because
your next job might be for someone in
some other part of the planet. So, how
would they even know you exist unless
you exist as a brand? And that doesn't
mean you have to be as good as Lauren,
who's a social influencer and a Forbes
30. But, uh, it does mean that you have
to take the extra step to package
yourself so that people even know you
exist. And because the idea that you
only create a resume when you lose a
job, it's it's not going to work because
nobody even knows who you are and
nobody's going to magically see that
resume. They need to know you're an
expert in that field while you're at
your job so that you can roll over to
something else. And that's a new way to
think about yourself. That and that's
uncomfortable for 99% of people. People
like to work hard and get rewarded. I
don't think unfortunately that's not
enough. People have to know who you are
and that adds an extra burden. But I I
think that is the reality of the global
economy we live in. It's it can lead to
a good lifestyle but it is very harsh
and brutal and we see that around us. So
I I I think that's uh something we just
have to manage.
>> Thank I actually want to add
what I was thinking.
Anyway um
I would like to give more practical
advice. So imagine uh you are
in your midcareer. Congratulations.
Very likely you you know how to do
something very well. Look at the
economic value of that. If there's no
economic value of what you are doing,
there's concept of jobs. Then
you're in trouble because you will
likely be automated first. So you need
to act accordingly. Now if you find the
economic value to be very positive,
embrace it. See how can you provide even
more value. How can you you utilize
those new technologies to be even more
productive or enable more people ride
this wave of AI? uh don't try to block
it because well fortunately or
unfortunately the um technological
advancements cannot be stopped. It
probably can but I don't know how to do
that.
>> Thanks all. So I I do have other
questions but I'm going to I want to
pause with my questions. I want to hand
it over to you all now. Um as I know
we're being cognizant of time. So
please, the floor is all yours now.
>> Um, first I want to say that it was good
to hear that now being called a basket
case could be taken as a compliment. As
long as your basket case of skills,
>> it's a compliment. That's good.
And yesterday I attended an event um
where one of the
founders said that said the a phrase
that kind of stuck with me and I I just
going to repeat it and I want your take
on it. He said that every company now
has a choice either uh a higher employee
or a build one.
And so what do you think of it?
>> Let's take this.
>> So I I think what the person is
referring I'll repeat the statement. You
either hire someone or you build one. So
if you look at AI over the last few
months just this summer it's made a
monumental leap. When AI just started at
the beginning of this year oh it seems
so long ago. Chat GPT's main function
was Google search right and Google
search it was just a better Google
search since that time AI has made a
huge leap in generative AI uh and then
aentic AI and you know just six months
ago that was utter fantasy it was utter
fantasy so generative AI is you take an
incomplete data set and it actually
generates the new data from from
inference and agentic is it makes a
thought I I think to your question,
those systems have come online only this
summer, but it gives companies the
ability to synthesize an employee. Not
perfect, but the fact that they can even
do it is revolutionary from a pure
technical perspective. Now, what it
means from a job perspective, it takes
us full circle. Simple jobs are highly
vulnerable. So if you look at an
accounting department, no need, as he
said, to hire a young accountant for a
senior accountant. They can just
synthesize uh a junior accountant based
on what the senior person says. New York
law firms have already stopped hiring
young lawyers because they just take the
partner's old contracts, whatever they
are, and then they ingest them into the
AI and now they synthesize a a
parallegal who's a reflection of that.
So I think we're already seeing this
radical restructuring of simpler jobs
and it is very sad for young people
because those are the jobs. Uh but I
think this is why you know we're saying
don't define yourself as a young person
with a small skill set. Find a a greater
goal because even if you got a job this
year as a young person doesn't mean you
can't be wiped out three months from
now. Right? So you you need to see
yourself as a as a bigger person, as an
intelligent person. You need to said
become an expert in something. And yeah,
there might be times where you make
money and you don't make money, but stay
at that and then you keep going on. And
I think this is the harsh reality that
everybody in this room lives in. So
there there's no point sugar coating the
world we live in. But I I think uh in
this harsh reality there there's a
chance I I do believe we will be in a
better place, but it's going to require
everybody to think much more critically
of themselves, pass it on to an expert
than the theory.
>> Well, I'm not sure. Uh I I think that
was actually a very great point that uh
was just raised. I I think the one other
thing I'll add to this is I do think
we're limiting ourselves a little bit if
we're just thinking are we going to
build an employee or hire one. like it
doesn't necessarily have to be that
they're directly substitutable with each
each other. There's a lot of ways in
which AI can't perform certain things
that humans can and in those senses like
the AI can be complimentary to a hire as
well and you know we shouldn't get like
stuck in the idea that they have to be
like in direct competition with each
other. There are ways in which AI can
complement human work as well and I
think we should keep an open mind about
those types of possibilities too.
I'll be very pragmatic. If I will have
capability to hire perfect engineer to
my team that will start
um making benefits to the company on the
day one, I'll be very happy to do it
right away. The practice shows that's
not possible. It it might be possible
for some simple jobs that uh that we
know have the higher chance to be to be
invited unfortunately. And uh
uh now in in my specific case uh it I'm
I'm trying to create a balance. So uh
people should have some initial skills
uh to ramp up slightly faster than
others. And uh my
expected ramp up period is is just a few
months. So if you can ramp up and learn
everything within within a few months,
you should be good.
But for that you have you should have a
solid baseline
and you need an ability to learn very
very quickly on the job. That's the
reality of uh of things in the rapidly
growing industries
simply because when we're getting
students freshly out of college, their
knowledge is already outdated by few
years sometimes. And uh the only thing
that helps is their capability of
learning very very quickly.
Thanks. I have a question about
credentiing and the higher education and
brands specifically like now that
Stanford is up on the screen the role of
brands um in securing for entry level or
even more senior level jobs the that
that totem hall of brands and
credentiing in higher education
Next question. Who wants to go forward?
>> I I think there's a couple answers to
this question. So one is I do think what
we should expect should be very
different in different types of
institutions. I don't think the job
market for Stanford graduates is the
same as the job market for people coming
out of a you know mid-tier state school
or something. So I you know I do think
that there's a lot of potential
differences across different parts of
the population. Now the other side of
that um I was actually I've been talking
to some policy makers about this about
how they think about credentiing. You
know should they reduce regulations
around credentiing so that it's easier
for people to switch into other careers
and uh you know develop those skills and
and access those jobs faster than
they're currently doing. I do think that
that's a very interesting question and
you know can we also speed up the
process in which they can learn? Can we
use AI to help people learn those types
of skills faster? I think these are all
just great questions and um I hope that
people in this room or outside of it,
you know, work on developing those types
of tools to help people adjust more
quickly and learn more quickly.
>> I uh uh I'll give a more technical
response. I think one of the interesting
things about AI that I'm just
experimenting now with uh my bubble's in
the back of the room is uh he was
approached by it e to look at their
online education. So I e is one of the
the world's largest engineering group
and they wanted to look at uh AI and
online from a fresh perspective. So what
they have is massive amounts of smart
people and what they do for online
education today is you you watch a video
and if you watch enough videos you get a
credential and some cases they might
connected with the university and you do
a exam. So he said how would AI do this?
So now you have a real human presenter,
an expert from Stanford and instead of
just watching the video, imagine you get
a popup and the popup asks the question
based on the live
statement that would just happened a few
seconds ago because the AI is listening
to the speaker and says, "What do you
think?" And now you can have 30 people
or 60 people around the world and the AI
can look deep into their answer and not
only provide feedback but share it with
all the other online respondents and the
speaker. Right? So AI really allows us
to rethink how we do things like online
education which are hugely powerful for
those who are motivated. Right? So I
mean we're we're there's a theme you
have to want to become smarter. You have
to want to learn AI. You have to learn
to master some AI in the field of
something. Whatever it is you love.
Could be uh running a hotel, could be
restaurant, could be building a car. And
and I think those kids and individuals
will succeed and be able to leverage uh
you know what universities are doing and
MIT is doing in terms of open
courseware. Um, if you don't do that, I
I I think it's it's going to be rough
the other direction. And um, you know,
so I think we're going to see potential
more extremes in the economy. We're
going to see young kids who are
motivated do better and better globally.
And I think we're going to see, you
know, people who struggle going to
they're going to be pushed the other
way. And um, there's a different issue.
What do we do with everybody who
struggles? But I I think you know on the
the upside is it's going to give great
opportunities for people who are
motivated.
>> I believe that the high education
requirement for white collar jobs is uh
is a thing of the past and I hope it
will go away eventually.
Founder of Luminar Austin Russell is a
Stanford dropout.
He went to Stanford went on top I think
on he dropped out after the first year.
He did not need education formal
education in order to build to build a
great companies and there are many
people uh like that at this point of
time uh everyone can get education very
cheaply or even for free that will land
them amazing job. As a hiring manager, I
I don't really care which university the
person's from. I frankly I don't care if
if the person actually went to the
university. My first question would be
show me what you did. Show me what you
did within the university. And by the
way, uh, universities are great for for
building this muscle for
talking to other people, uh,
collaborating,
um, getting some initial knowledge, uh,
pushing people to build things. But it
doesn't mean that you cannot do the same
in in your garage with your friends.
If you are building amazing things in in
your garage with your friends anywhere
and you can demonstrate that you can
land a job in in many companies.
However, unfortunately in in the
corporate envir in in the modern
corporate environment it is uh still a
formal requirement uh to have higher
education but I believe it will slowly
go away. Thank you.
Of course, being at Stanford is still
impressive.
>> Well, thank you all. Uh let's do one
more and then um we can certainly
continue the conversation, you know, but
uh
>> over drinks.
>> Over drinks, which is probably
preferable for on a Friday, right? So,
>> here we go.
>> Uh so, um my question is around job
hopping. So as you might know we
mentally have this blockage that someone
who does not stay in a job for a very
long amount of time is considered
unstable by normal norms but as you can
see the industry sometimes it's it's
crazy about blockchain sometimes it's
about influencer marketing sometime it's
about energy sometime it's about AI
agents so
how do you see people who are shifting
jobs within a year and I I would like to
uh I mean one of the startup founders uh
who is a SAS successful SAS founder said
that uh uh I mean uh he said to me that
one of the most biggest red flags is of
hiring is to take people who just by a
fit of emotion change the companies. Uh
but for me me and my friend both were at
the same level and he claimed that if
you jump jobs too quick no one will hire
you. But at this point of time, five
years from now, just because of jumping
jobs pretty quickly, sometimes even less
than a year, I'm earning five times more
than him. So I'm just curious how is
this judgment working and how does that
do?
I am the person who is taking exactly
those decisions. So I am the person who
is looking at the resume and and this is
indeed the thing that I am I'm
personally checking.
Um
the fast answer to this question it
depends. So if you um if you switch jobs
and you cannot explain why that's a red
flag.
If you can explain what is happening and
and by the way that there are many life
circumstances that that is forcing
people to to change the jobs against the
will
and that's okay that can happen but if
uh if you do it continuously so there is
a trend then uh the trend can really
provide a red flag. I personally uh put
a lot of a lot of effort in in every
single individual and uh I'm growing
everyone in in my team and uh uh when
when everybody
what when the person is leaving my team
it is uh it is not uh considered a loss
or something like that. I consider that
as a graduation because I'm I'm
graduating the person into into another
life and and we celebrate. So, so that's
a great thing. But if uh if the person
is changing job every single year,
um I'm asking the question why this is
happening. Is there something wrong with
these companies or there there's there
something wrong with people? And
unfortunately I have seen uh many things
in in the workplace. Uh I have seen many
toxic people and uh and those toxic
people are are basically
job popping from one company to another
and uh spreading negative vibes and and
this is not what I want because I want
everybody on my team uh uh to be happy.
So overall,
uh, don't fear changing jobs, but be
ready to explain why you're doing it.
Thank you.
>> Actually, I've never had a job.
>> Uh, yeah, I I think Demetro, you know,
made some very good points. The only
thing that I'll add to that I guess is
uh it is important to not be closed off
to opportunities. You know, if there are
great opportunities out there, you
should keep an open mind about them and
not be stuck in doing something
especially if you don't like it just
because you think you need more tenure.
You know, you should be keeping an open
mind about good opportunities that are
out there and meeting people and talking
to people and things like that.
Thank you so much everyone for your
wonderful questions and engaging
conversation. Jana, Demetro, and I can't
take thank you guys enough. Well,
anyway, like I said, we can continue
this conversation just over food and
drinks that are waiting for us. So,
thank you all. Let's give everyone a
round of applause.
Yeah, let's enjoy the rest of the
evening. Thanks again for everyone uh
attending. Take care.
>> Great. Thank you.
I can't even get the Stanford parking.
[Music]
>> Thank you so much.
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