The most dangerous AI job losses may be invisible at first.
Not because people get fired overnight.
But because entire layers of organizational friction quietly disappear.
A lot of white-collar work today exists because organizations need humans to:
- move information between systems,
- summarize context,
- verify things quickly,
- coordinate teams,
- translate representations,
- route approvals,
- create status visibility,
- maintain process continuity.
AI is getting very good at compressing those layers.
What’s interesting is that the first impact may not look like “job loss.”
It may look like:
- fewer junior hires,
- smaller teams,
- reduced ownership,
- shrinking decision scope,
- fewer people in coordination-heavy roles,
- humans supervising outputs they no longer deeply understand.
Organizations will call it:
“efficiency.”
Employees may experience it as:
gradual cognitive displacement.
And I think this is why the AI conversation around jobs often feels incomplete.
People debate:
“Will AI replace software engineers?”
“Will AI replace writers?”
“Will AI replace analysts?”
But the bigger shift may be this:
AI may not first replace expertise.
It may first replace the organizational friction surrounding expertise.
Am I missing something or making sense?
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