You people make it seem like 1000 job losses is a big thing in todays news. Pump up the volume, and multiply it by five to almost ten, then you'll experience the world in which I lived spanning 20 years, decades in the making. Everyone is so - minor these days. Back in my time, it was almost 5000-10000 job losses each cycle. Wouldn't know a hardship if it bit them in the a-s. Those cycles give you the opportunity to go learn something and to become a professional interviewer like I once was.
Now for you IT folks today, best get hoping. Local to the states, or overseas, you all are about to get some competition. The sh*t they're teaching in schools these days, using the tools available today, get your education and work experience up to date.
My son works for a tier one, brought in as an intern through a skill based work program, working as a background as IT administration and networking as a default path, but also cybersecurity in education as the advanced path, utilizing AI coding as an extension. I understand how each of these fields can be stand alone, but with the introduction of AI, he's been able to combine and produce remarkable results, not necessarily by understanding perhaps code itself, but understanding the results in which they need to accomplish the end result. By default and through figuring things out, he's also learning the code within a multiple fields of discipline, to arrive at the end result.
This is corporate approved today. Unfortunately, this has since displaced, a handful of more costly, and more mature IT people within his own group on site - because he produces results and is a young, ambitious hard worker.
Coined the supervising intern of interns within his own group, his company is looking to bring in more like him aboard, at the expense of those more costly. I've written about this at length, how I heard that companies displace employees at the expense of the youth. But, there are programs that are teaching the youth of today, valuable experience. What they will not learn, is the experiences of the experienced unless shared. So, within the IT field, if you thought things were tough today, I'm offering you a tiny bit of insight of what is still to come. I don't work in IT, but I get to hear all about it daily. Sometimes I don't want to hear about it, but what's a parent to do. I listen, ask questions, engage. I love my kids. They love my interest and interaction.
One example, one intern, is programming a script to complete a certain task. Her assignment has been a half year in the making. My son stated it can be completed in less than two weeks through AI automation, and with the right person involved. I told my son, for the sake of her employment, don't say a word, let her do this. Never target a skeleton crew as a workforce. Corporations always want the least amount of overhead.
Utilize the power of an assist, but don't let that assist put people out of a job. They, people like my son, have power within both learning experience, education, and a tool. I believe it's our power to help educate and direct them, in how to best wield it. We are more alike than not. We all have livelihoods, and want to earn for our families. Don't displace people, because at the end of the day and within a future not too far from today, you will become the displaced.