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Instead of protesting AI's impact on entry-level jobs, recent graduates should embrace AI to become experts. They can then leverage this native understanding as a unique selling point to help established, slower-moving organizations transition, creating a powerful career opportunity rather than a threat.
Deel's CEO predicts that new graduates, being "AI native," will master AI tools so effectively they'll become more productive than experienced workers reluctant to adapt. This generation will leverage AI as a superpower, fundamentally changing the value of experience versus tool proficiency.
The best defense against being replaced by AI is to become the person who best leverages it. If a firm uses AI to shrink a department, the employees who are most proficient with the new tools will become indispensable managers of the technology, not its victims.
The most effective career strategy for employees facing automation is not resistance, but mastery. By learning to operate, manage, and improve the very AI systems that threaten their roles, individuals can secure their positions and become indispensable experts who manage the machines.
While AI will eliminate jobs, it simultaneously creates the largest financial opportunity for the under-25 generation in history, bigger than the internet. It is a tidal wave that young, adaptable individuals are best positioned to ride, while older professionals may struggle to pivot.
While many fear AI will eliminate junior positions, Accenture is increasing its entry-level hiring. The firm views recent graduates as more AI-fluent than experienced staff, making them a strategic asset to be leveraged, not a cost to be automated away.
Contrary to fears that AI replaces entry-level jobs, companies will increasingly seek 'AI-native' young talent. These employees grew up with the technology and can apply it with a fluency their older peers lack. This makes them highly valuable 'super producers,' reversing the assumption that junior roles are at risk.
Instead of replacing entry-level roles, Arvind Krishna sees AI as a massive force multiplier for junior talent. The strategic play is to use AI to elevate a recent graduate's productivity to that of a seasoned expert. This perspective flips the layoff narrative, justifying hiring *more* junior employees.
The class of 2026 will be the first "ChatGPT generation." Their key selling point to employers will not be their potential or affordability, but their innate ability to leverage generative AI for productivity, a skill that more senior, "AI laggard" employees may lack.
The immediate career advantage in the AI era goes to employees who become internal AI champions. As CEOs mandate AI adoption, those who are already AI-native and can teach their teams to become more efficient will receive massive promotions and raises. This creates a clear path for advancement by leading the AI transition from within.
Reid Hoffman advises young people to leverage their familiarity with AI as a core career asset. They should approach companies with the pitch: "I'm an AI native. You need an AI transformation. Here's how I can help." This positions them as essential talent for the future.