Saturday, March 28, 2026
24.1 C
New Delhi

OPINION | The Age Of AI Is here. It’s Scary, But Also A Second Chance For Professionals

By Raghav Gupta

Every few decades, something comes along that quietly rewrites the rules of work. This time, it is AI. It is no longer a buzzword or an experiment. It is already sitting inside our emails, our workflows, our machines, and even our decisions.

The change is happening faster than anyone imagined. One new tool changes a process, that process changes a job, and that job changes an entire business. Within months, the same role you have been doing for years starts to look different.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth. Most people are still pretending it is not their problem. Mid-career professionals believe they have seen tech shifts before. Blue-collar workers assume AI is something that happens in glass offices, not factories. Both are wrong.

The Real Problem Is Not Job Loss, It Is Obsolescence

AI is quietly hollowing out the middle of the workforce. Routine work, even if it looks skilled, is being automated faster than companies can reskill. Documentation, inspection, maintenance logs, and analysis are already being handled by algorithms.

The result is subtle but serious.

  • The manager who ignores AI tools ends up managing fewer people.
  • The technician who avoids learning about sensors ends up with fewer shifts.
  • The professional who assumes experience is enough realises the market has moved on.

It is not about losing jobs overnight. It is about slowly becoming irrelevant.

The Flip Side

For every job that gets automated, another is being created somewhere else. The AI ecosystem needs servers, cooling systems, chip factories, logistics networks, and data centres. All of these need people to build, maintain, and operate them.

That is why this moment is also a massive opportunity for blue-collar and mid-skill talent. The next decade will not just belong to coders or engineers. It will belong to:

  • Operators who can think in both mechanical and digital terms
  • Technicians who can repair a cobot, or collaborative robot, as easily as a motor
  • Electricians and HVAC experts who can keep data centres alive in 45-degree Indian summers

For mid-career professionals, the opportunity looks different but equally big. Most companies do not need more AI scientists. They need AI translators. People who understand the business side of things but can now speak the AI language too. A project manager who knows how to use generative AI to simplify documentation or an HR head who uses AI to identify attrition risk will always have an edge.

What Needs To Change

The focus has to move from fearing AI to working with it. The learning curve is real, but it is not as complicated as it sounds.

If you are a blue-collar:

Start with digital basics. Understand what sensors do, what data means, and how machines learn patterns. Watch engineers when new equipment is installed. Ask questions. The goal is not to code but to connect your physical expertise with digital awareness.

If you are a mid-career professional:

Stop thinking you are too senior to learn this. Pick one part of your job and make it smarter. Use AI to summarise data, write a report, or plan your week. Once you start experimenting, the tools stop feeling like threats.

Governments and companies are waking up to this, too. India’s Skill Mission is adding AI modules for technicians and industrial workers. Startups are building hybrid courses that blend vocational learning with AI tools. Business schools are offering micro-courses in AI fluency for managers. Upskilling is no longer optional. It is a survival skill.

The Real Divide in the AI Era

The world ahead will not be split by white-collar or blue-collar work. It will be split between those who adapt and those who do not. AI rewards curiosity and punishes comfort.

This moment might look intimidating, but it is also a reset button. It gives everyone, from a factory operator to a finance manager, a chance to rebuild their career around what machines still cannot do: judgment, context, and empathy.

If you keep learning, AI will not replace you. It will amplify you. The future will belong to the ones who learn to work with it, not against it.

(The author is the Founder & CEO, Futurense)

Disclaimer: The opinions, beliefs, and views expressed by the various authors and forum participants on this website are personal and do not reflect the opinions, beliefs, and views of ABP Network Pvt. Ltd.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Rivalry breaks records: Malaysia made Japan and South Korea compete to build twin towers and the results shocked everyone

When Malaysia set out to build the Petronas Twin Towers in the 1990s, it adopted an unusual strategy that would later become the stuff of engineering legend. Read More

Wanted to visit sister: Florida man confesses after crashing into Daytona airport in attempt to steal plane

A Florida man who crashed his car through an airport gate and tried to board multiple aircraft told federal authorities he wanted to steal a plane to visit his sister, reports the Independent. 58-year-old Bryan J. Read More

‘Dhurandhar 2’ creates history, scores highest 2nd Saturday in Hindi cinema

‘Dhurandhar 2’ which released in cinemas on March 19 has been on a record-breaking spree ever since it released. Read More

Sheridan Gorman murder: Immigrant accused of fatally shooting student is ‘missing part of brain’

The man accused of killing Sheridan Gorman is missing part of his brain and the “development of a child”, his lawyer told a court, as the case over the death of a university student in Chicago continues to unfold. Read More

Indian-origin congresswoman calls for compensation for migrants ‘traumatised’ by ICE crackdown

Indian-origin US lawmaker Pramila Jayapal has called for reparations for undocumented immigrants, saying families were “traumatized” by immigration enforcement under US president Donald Trump. Read More

Topics

Rivalry breaks records: Malaysia made Japan and South Korea compete to build twin towers and the results shocked everyone

When Malaysia set out to build the Petronas Twin Towers in the 1990s, it adopted an unusual strategy that would later become the stuff of engineering legend. Read More

Wanted to visit sister: Florida man confesses after crashing into Daytona airport in attempt to steal plane

A Florida man who crashed his car through an airport gate and tried to board multiple aircraft told federal authorities he wanted to steal a plane to visit his sister, reports the Independent. 58-year-old Bryan J. Read More

‘Dhurandhar 2’ creates history, scores highest 2nd Saturday in Hindi cinema

‘Dhurandhar 2’ which released in cinemas on March 19 has been on a record-breaking spree ever since it released. Read More

Sheridan Gorman murder: Immigrant accused of fatally shooting student is ‘missing part of brain’

The man accused of killing Sheridan Gorman is missing part of his brain and the “development of a child”, his lawyer told a court, as the case over the death of a university student in Chicago continues to unfold. Read More

Indian-origin congresswoman calls for compensation for migrants ‘traumatised’ by ICE crackdown

Indian-origin US lawmaker Pramila Jayapal has called for reparations for undocumented immigrants, saying families were “traumatized” by immigration enforcement under US president Donald Trump. Read More

Iran-backed Houthis join war with attack against Israel

There are fears the Iranian proxy may attack shipping in the Red Sea, adding to global economic woes. Read More

Over 3000 J&K govt schools have under 10 students: Minister

File photo SRINAGAR: Over 3,000 govt schools in J&K have had zero or less than 10 students since 2022, education minister Sakina Itoo told the assembly on Saturday. Read More

After Zoji La avalanche deaths, Ladakh hill council stakes claim on Zero Point

File photo SRINAGAR: A day after an avalanche struck at Zero Point at Zoji La, located at an altitude of over 11,500 ft, killing seven people from Kargil and injuring six others, Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council-Kargil Sat Read More

Related Articles