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How AI is changing the future of work.

According to the World Economic Forum, the back half of this decade reshapes work. The skills it puts in demand aren't the ones you'd expect — and they're the hardest to automate.

A frontline team member practising on a mobile device

The World Economic Forum is clear that the rest of this decade brings major change for the world of work. You would expect the in-demand skills to be technical — and the technical ones do stay in demand. The surprise is the other half of the list. It is deeply, stubbornly human, and it sits in the qualities that no model can install for you.

The skills actually in demand

Look across the professions the research puts in growing demand and the same human capabilities keep recurring. They are not coding languages or tool certifications. They are the qualities that decide how a person meets a situation they have never seen before.

  • Creative thinking — finding an answer the playbook does not contain.
  • Resilience, flexibility and agility — staying steady, and moving quickly, when the ground shifts.
  • Curiosity and lifelong learning — the appetite to keep picking things up long after the formal course has ended.

These are human capabilities, not technical ones. They travel across every role on the floor, and they are precisely the things a machine cannot hand you.

Why these, and why now

Artificial intelligence changes the tools, of course. But the deeper effect is on the pace. It speeds up the rate at which everything else changes — and it reshapes the culture of work around it: how we search, how we decide, how quickly we expect a thing to be done.

It is easy to picture this only as engineers building software in new ways. The larger shift is in expectation. AI changes how we look something up, how we choose a pair of shoes, how we order a coffee. It changes how work gets done and how we collaborate, and how fast we expect things to happen. Bit by bit, that resets the culture of a whole workplace — the unspoken sense of what is normal, and how quickly the normal moves.

Older colleagues remember working before email and search engines. The norms felt permanent at the time; they were not. In another ten years the ground will move again, in ways we cannot fully name yet. The constant is not any single tool. It is the pace of the change itself.

When change is the job, curiosity is the skill that keeps up.

The human edge

When change accelerates, the adaptable and the curious are the ones who keep pace. The people who are resilient, flexible and genuinely interested meet each shift with the appetite to shape the culture rather than be unsettled by it. They take to a new way of working with energy instead of dread. They are the ones who carry a brand into the next decade.

None of this happens by accident, and it is not fixed at birth. These capabilities are built — through practice, on the floor, every shift. That is the part of work AI cannot do for you, and the part a performance platform exists to strengthen: the daily habit of becoming a little more curious, a little more adaptable, than you were yesterday.

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