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AI expert Allie Miller predicts job titles will be dead by 2027. Instead of hiring for narrow roles, she structures her team around three "zones of influence": back-office operations, front-facing marketing, and product. This model allows for more fluid, AI-augmented roles fit for the future of work.
In the age of AI, distinct roles like designer, PM, and engineer are converging. Long-term career success hinges on the ability to fluidly move between these disciplines and focus on shipping good software, rather than being confined by a rigid job title. Obsession with titles is a liability.
Don't think of AI as replacing roles. Instead, envision a new organizational structure where every human employee manages a team of their own specialized AI agents. This model enhances individual capabilities without eliminating the human team, making everyone more effective.
Instead of creating a virtual 'Product Manager,' effective AI involves specialized agents for discrete functions like prototyping, testing, or analytics. This redefines jobs by allowing a single person to orchestrate multiple functional agents, rather than simply creating a digital version of an existing role.
Industry leaders from LinkedIn and Salesforce predict that AI will automate narrow, specialized tasks, fundamentally reshaping careers. The future workforce will favor 'professional generalists' who can move fluidly between projects and roles, replacing rigid departmental structures with dynamic 'work charts.'
The era of hyper-specialization, where individuals had narrow roles, is ending. AI empowers generalists who can handle tasks across disciplines. Future job titles will become broader, with a single 'Product' role covering product management, design, and engineering.
Reframe your job as a collection of tasks, not a monolithic title. This allows you to identify which tasks AI can automate, which it can augment, and which remain uniquely human, providing a clear path for adaptation and reskilling in the face of technological change.
The traditional tech team structure of separate product, engineering, and design roles is becoming obsolete. AI startups favor small teams of 'polymaths'—T-shaped builders who can contribute across disciplines. This shift values broad, hands-on capability over deep specialization for most early-stage roles.
As AI democratizes the ability to create products, rigid job titles like "Product Manager" and "Engineer" will become obsolete. Meta PM Zevi Arnovitz predicts that responsibilities will merge, and the focus will shift to the act of creation. In the near future, everyone on a product team will simply be a "builder."
In today's dynamic work environment, job descriptions are becoming less relevant. Working Genius allows for a more fluid and productive organization of work by assigning tasks based on who is best suited for them, even if it crosses traditional departmental lines like sales, marketing, and operations.
Powerful AI assistants are shifting hiring calculus. Rather than building large, specialized departments, some leaders are considering hiring small teams of experienced, curious generalists. These individuals can leverage AI to solve problems across functions like sales, HR, and operations, creating a leaner, more agile organization.