Introduction
- What is AI automation? What kinds of tasks are being disrupted?
- Why some jobs are less vulnerable: human empathy, creativity, unpredictable physical environments, ethical judgment.
Criteria for being AI‑resistant
- Non‑routine tasks
- High emotional or social intelligence
- Physical dexterity / manual skills in dynamic environments
- Ethical, legal, or regulatory complexity
Top 10 AI‑Resistant Careers
- Mental health counselor / therapist
- Skilled trades (electricians, plumbers, HVAC technicians)
- Healthcare roles (nurses, physician assistants)
- Medical managers & public health professionals
- Speech‑language pathologists
- Environmental / renewable energy engineers & technicians
- AI ethics officers / human‑AI interaction specialists
- Teachers & educational support (especially K‑12, special education)
- Emergency services: firefighters, paramedics, police officers
- Creative professions: artists, designers, creative directors
Growth Projections & Data
- Citing studies that predict growth in care economy, health, green energy, etc. Orchard+3Fast Company+3Entrepreneur+3
- Jobs already labeled “safe” or “low risk” by research. Business Insider+1
Skills & Education Needed
- Soft skills: empathy, leadership, complex communication
- Hybrid skills: combining technical literacy with human‑centric abilities
- Lifelong learning, regulatory / ethical frameworks, trade skills
How to Future‑Proof Your Career
- Stay adaptable
- Learn to work with AI tools rather than compete
- Emphasize uniquely human aspects of your job
- Where to specialize
Conclusion
- Summary
- Encouragement: AI will change work, but many valuable careers remain
- Call to action: which of these match your interests / what training can you start now
