Work & Careers

Why 70% of Today’s Corporate Roles Won’t Survive the GenAI Era

Created on 2025-09-26 18:52

Published on 2025-09-26 19:01

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: most corporate roles won’t survive the GenAI era.

Not because the work goes away — the work is still there, and growing. But because people and organizations refuse to adapt to how the work itself is changing.

Sacred processes become “holy cows.” Legacy systems are treated as “can’t touch that one.” And employees fear: “If I change this, my job will suffer.”

The reality is that GenAI reshapes workflows end-to-end. If people cling to today’s structures, the work doesn’t vanish — it just gets redistributed to those willing to rethink, redesign, and rebuild.

Busting a Common Myth: “LLMs Hallucinate, So They Can’t Be Used in Regulated Systems”

One refrain I hear often is: “We can’t put agents into systems with regulatory or legal impact — LLMs hallucinate.”

This mindset kills innovation before it starts.

Yes, hallucination is real. But it is not a showstopper — it’s a solvable design problem.

Hallucination isn’t a reason to avoid GenAI in regulated industries. It’s a reason to design smarter systems.

The Pivot in Roles

In GenAI, corporate lanes collapse. The roles of the future will look more like a pivot between two archetypes:

1. Senior Architects / Advisors

Navigators in uncharted waters who:

They provide high-touch design and research support where stakes are high and clarity matters more than speed.

2. Hands-On Builders

The new generation of makers who:

They thrive where roadmaps don’t exist and discovery happens in the act of building.

Why This Matters

In GenAI, traditional titles don’t map neatly. You can’t just slot in a “systems architect” and a “full-stack engineer” and expect success.

You need:

Final Thought

The future of work in GenAI won’t be defined by the job titles we’re used to. It will be defined by builders — both the strategic navigators and the hands-on makers.

The work doesn’t go away. But the people and organizations unwilling to adapt to how the work is changing may find that their roles do