Ep 101: Only Humans Need Apply: Winners And Losers In The Age Of Smart Machines

Ep 101: Only Humans Need Apply: Winners And Losers In The Age Of Smart Machines

Thomas Davenport is the President's Distinguished Professor of Information Technology and Management at Babson College in Massachusetts. He is an author, the co-founder of the International Institute for Analytics, a Fellow at the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy, and Senior Advisor to Deloitte Analytics. He has spent the last 30 years focused on the Sociology of Information, studying and teaching about how people and organizations use information. He currently teaches MBAs at Babson College about Analytics, Cognitive Technologies, Big Data, and Knowledge Management.

Thomas is the co-author of the new book, Only Humans Need Apply: Winners and Losers in the Age of Smart Machines. In the book Thomas and co-author Julia Kirby discuss the rise of job automation and how humans can secure their place in the workplace in the midst of this shift by using the 5 alternative strategies they lay out.

The move towards automation in the workplace, while not new, is a controversial subject that is becoming a large part of our current work economy. There are two camps of people today, those who are opposed to the move towards automation and those who are embracing it. The people who are opposed are scared about the implications of automating jobs. They feel that this shift in our economy will create chaos and wipe out jobs for humans. The camp of people who are embracing it feel that automating certain jobs could be a good thing and that we will always find a way to create new jobs for humans.

Thomas talks about how reality is somewhere in the middle of the two camps. While automation could cause some jobs to be at risk, it may not be as perilous as some people may think. He talks about how most jobs have several tasks to them, some of them are automatable and some aren't. In the podcast he gives an example explaining how automation could help lawyers cut down on the time they take to search through documents and contracts for items pertaining to a case. This process probably only takes up about 20% of what lawyers actually do, so as Thomas mentions, this automation wouldn't completely replace lawyers, but perhaps in a law firm of 10 lawyers, the automation would relieve the workload to the point where they can do with 8 lawyers instead of 10.

In an Oxford study done in 2013 they estimated that 47% of U.S. jobs are automatable. People such as Stephen Hawking and Elon Musk have been very vocal about their concerns with the future of human jobs and our very existence in light of this rapid shift to automation. However, when you look at jobs that have already moved towards automation, such as bank tellers, it shows that the move may not be as rapid as they think. In the 1980s there were a half a million bank tellers, and today, there are still half a million bank tellers despite the invention and implementation of ATMs.

While automation may not take over human jobs at an alarmingly quick rate, it is still something we need to be aware of. Automation, bots, and software are getting to the point now where they are becoming more capable of taking over knowledge jobs, whereas before they were only taking over labor intensive jobs such as manufacturing. Because of this, Thomas and Julia felt it was important to write their book that, first of all, encourages augmenting human labor with smart machines as opposed to completely replacing humans with machines and, secondly, shows people five ways to make themselves irreplaceable in the workplace.

What you will learn in this episode:

  • Is automation a new thing?
  • Whether or not jobs are in jeopardy because of the growing use of automation and bots
  • 5 steps you can take to be sure your job is secure
  • The kinds of jobs that will be affected by automation and which ones will be safe
  • Some encouraging examples of automation being used today
  • In the move towards automation, what does this mean for organizations? What does it mean for individuals?
  • How we can prepare for automation
  • The timeline for automation and when automation will become mainstream
  • Where the future of automation is going

Links From The Episode:

tomdavenport.com/

Only Humans Need Apply On Amazon.com

(Music by Ronald Jenkees)

Jaksot(1183)

Solving the $2 Trillion Student Debt Crisis with U.S. News & World Report CEO Eric Gertler

Solving the $2 Trillion Student Debt Crisis with U.S. News & World Report CEO Eric Gertler

Many parents and leaders are wondering if a college degree is still worth the high educational costs. With student debt reaching nearly $2 trillion and the AI impact changing the future of work, the t...

2 Maalis 48min

Jack Dorsey Just Fired 40% of His Company. Stock Soared 24%. He Says You're Next

Jack Dorsey Just Fired 40% of His Company. Stock Soared 24%. He Says You're Next

February 27, 2026: Jack Dorsey cuts 40% of Block's workforce — 4,000 jobs — credits AI, and predicts most companies will follow within a year. We do a deep dive on whether this is genuine AI transform...

27 Helmi 38min

Engineers Are Burning Out, Young Workers Are Shut Out, and Trade Schools Are Suddenly Elite

Engineers Are Burning Out, Young Workers Are Shut Out, and Trade Schools Are Suddenly Elite

February 26, 2026: Engineers are facing a productivity panic as coding agents accelerate output — and pressure — at the same time. Nvidia just posted a staggering quarter, underscoring how fast the in...

26 Helmi 36min

Anthropic Abandons Safety Promise, JPMorgan Replacing Workers, & The Top Skills for 2026

Anthropic Abandons Safety Promise, JPMorgan Replacing Workers, & The Top Skills for 2026

February 25, 2026: This week Anthropic — one of the companies most associated with responsible AI — gutted the safety commitment it made in 2023. The same week the Pentagon gave its CEO a Friday ultim...

25 Helmi 37min

Anthropic Moved Into Your Office, the Fed Admitted It Can't Help, and Goldman Said It Was All for Nothing

Anthropic Moved Into Your Office, the Fed Admitted It Can't Help, and Goldman Said It Was All for Nothing

February 24, 2026: Five major stories broke in the last 24 hours at the intersection of AI and the future of work — and they're all in conversation with each other. Anthropic launched Claude directly...

25 Helmi 47min

Why the Frontline Workforce Is the Future of Work (And How Spectrum Is Proving It)

Why the Frontline Workforce Is the Future of Work (And How Spectrum Is Proving It)

Many companies try to solve low morale with simple perks like wellness apps, but workers often care more about real pay and career growth. The big challenge today is keeping frontline employees happy ...

23 Helmi 51min

The Robot Is Already Your Boss. Here Are the Rules It Should Follow

The Robot Is Already Your Boss. Here Are the Rules It Should Follow

Feb 20, 2026: AI is already deciding who gets hired, promoted, and fired — and there are almost no rules governing how it does any of that. In this episode, I'm building those rules. I call them the ...

20 Helmi 1h 1min

AI Job Risk Map Revealed, Accenture Ties Promotions to AI, & Only 5% Are AI Fluent

AI Job Risk Map Revealed, Accenture Ties Promotions to AI, & Only 5% Are AI Fluent

February 19, 2026: AI is rapidly becoming a career requirement and the workforce is splitting into those who can adapt and those who get squeezed. In today's episode, I cover 5 stories that reveal wha...

19 Helmi 38min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
psykopodiaa-podcast
hyva-paha-johtaminen
rss-rahamania
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
herrasmieshakkerit
rss-tarkeista-asioista-2
rss-sami-miettinen-neuvottelija
rahapuhetta
rss-lahtijat
rss-rentotapaus
rss-sisalto-kuntoon
rss-seuraava-potilas
pomojen-suusta
sijoituspodi
rss-muutoksenanatomiaa-podcast
rss-uppoava-vn-laiva
rss-tyoelaman-timantteja