AI job exposure is a reason to prepare, not a reason to panic
AI exposure means parts of a job may be changed by AI. It does not automatically mean the job disappears. This page separates exposure, augmentation, automation, and career-transition planning.
Key data
What the data says
8 min read. These numbers come from the cited sources and are translated into practical career decisions.
Advanced-economy jobs exposed to AI
~60%
IMF estimates that about 60% of jobs in advanced economies may be impacted by AI, with both augmentation and substitution possible.
IMF
Global exposure estimate
40%
IMF estimate for jobs globally that may be impacted by AI.
IMF
Task-level moderate use
36%
Anthropic found roughly 36% of occupations saw Claude used for at least a quarter of associated tasks.
Anthropic
Deep task coverage
~4%
Anthropic found only about 4% of occupations used AI across at least three-quarters of associated tasks.
Anthropic
Decision table
Where to focus if your work is exposed to AI
The strongest career move is usually not to flee a role. It is to identify which tasks are being automated, which tasks are being augmented, and where your judgment still matters.
#1
Skill translation
Map your current tasks into transferable skills and missing proof.
Translate skills#2
AI workflow proof
Create one before/after example showing how you improved speed, quality, or decision clarity.
Build portfolio proof#3
Career pivot validation
Compare three target roles by skill gap, wage, growth, and evidence you can create in 30 days.
Plan a pivotInterpretation
What to do with this
These takeaways are meant to turn labor-market evidence into a practical next move.
Exposure is not destiny
A job can be highly exposed because AI can help with many tasks. That may raise productivity, reduce hiring, or change the role design depending on how employers deploy it.
Task evidence matters
The practical question is which tasks are now faster, which require more review, and which still depend on trust, context, taste, negotiation, or accountability.
Build transition proof early
The safest move is to create evidence of AI-aware work before you need it: a workflow, case story, portfolio artifact, or quantified achievement.
Tools
Turn the data into a career move
Use these when you want a concrete artifact: a skill map, work sample, resume bullet, interview story, or pivot plan.
FAQ
Common questions
Does AI exposure mean my job will disappear?
No. Exposure means AI can affect tasks in the job. It can lead to augmentation, automation, workflow redesign, or new skill expectations.
What should I do first if my role is exposed?
Start with task mapping: list recurring tasks, mark what AI can draft or automate, then identify where human judgment and domain context still create value.
Method
How to read this guide
We compare macro exposure estimates from IMF with task-use evidence from Anthropic and labor-market demand data from Stanford AI Index.
The ratings combine exposure, practical control, skill-transfer potential, and the usefulness of a concrete next step.
We treat exposure as a prompt for skill translation and proof-building, not as a layoff prediction.
Sources and limits
What to know before using it
AI exposure estimates are not employment forecasts. Adoption, regulation, workflow design, and firm strategy can change outcomes.
Anthropic data reflects Claude usage and may overrepresent some technical and writing-heavy tasks.
Use this page to choose a validation plan, not to make a one-step career decision.
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