artificial intelligence

Is Your Career AI-Proof? Preparing For The Changing Nature Of Work

iStock | hirun


There are a lot of strikes going on right now. The Writer’s Guild of America, The Screen Actors Guild of America, United Auto Workers, Airline Pilots, Hotel Workers, and Flight Attendants, to name a few. These strikes are not just about money. At the heart of these actions is an existential fear their professions are doomed.

Actors and writers fear Artificial Intelligence. Auto workers fear automation. Pilots fear self-piloting planes. Hotel workers fear they will be stuck in poverty. X workers fear the math won’t add up in their favor. The United States Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts the future decline or growth of labor sectors down to the number (results may vary).

If you think you’re in a doomed industry, company, or position, be proactive, but don’t panic.

1.     Change is evolution, not revolution. Societal changes take time, including work. Think of a Town Crier, who yelled the news to whole villages as far back as ancient Roman times and as recent as every British royal announcement (and still exists as a ceremonial position and  bizarre sub-culture). Now we have the internet and, by last count, 5.18 billion town criers who can yell to the whole world 24/7. Did the job really disappear or did it transform little by little until it became social media? You have transferrable skills that you can use to skip along the lily pads as required by any major changes in your status (aka doom).  

2.     Time is on your side. Once again, be proactive, but don’t be sloppy. You have time to research, formulate a strategic plan, and make big decisions like re-locating or moving in a new direction. Take small steps if you need to, like updating your resume and LinkedIn profile. Those are great ways to see knowledge gaps (resume) and tell your professional story (LinkedIn). After that, raise the stakes by exploring opportunities in your area and beyond. Start make an honest data driven assessment of your job landscape and see where it takes you.

3.     Doomed doesn’t mean done. For example, COBOL. Nobody uses that anymore – that’s a dead language, right. The point is, plentiful COBOL developer jobs and positions may be a thing of the past, but people who know COBOL are still in demand, sometimes high demand. Those skills are still needed to maintain systems still running COBOL, update them, or migrate them to new platforms like cloud computing.

4.     Doom can be balkanized. Some professions may be balkanized. Here are two examples. Women’s reproductive health care professionals and bail bondsmen. In some states being a reproductive health care doctor, nurse, or worker is a very risky proposition and in some states it’s fine and in (increasingly high demand). In some states bail is now illegal and your chances of working as a bail bondsman is doomed, but in many states it’s business as usual so your industry hasn’t vanished, it’s just moved to another state. If you can move, you can find the markets that still need your skills and experience.

5.     You may be able work on a remote basis. When you think about the way you go about finding work, and for whom you will work, you may consider broadening your horizons. Your type of work may be doomed where you live, but there is still a robust need for your services elsewhere that places you in a leveraged position. If you haven’t considered remote work before, circumstances may dictate you seek out new ways to use your skill set and remote work can be a rewarding and lucrative option.

6.     Always Be Training. Training, training, training! If you need to learn new skills, learn new skills. Think of it as swimming or drowning. It’s going to end one way or another so you may as well learn to swim. Explore job transition programs and aid from local and state governments, or the federal government. For example, AI. Everybody is justifiably scared AI is coming for their job and they may be right. They’re probably right. However, AI isn’t coming for every job, but it will transform the way things are done globally the same way the personal computer did. People with advanced computer skills had an advantage and people who know how to use AI tools will have an advantage. There is time to learn them, but get cracking!


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

Unlocking the AI Career Frontier: Prompt Engineering in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

There’s been a lot of recent completely justifiable panic over artificial intelligence (AI). This week CNN reported, “…the technology behind ChatGPT could make mind-reading a reality.”  A fake AI-generated photograph showing an explosion near the Pentagon posted on a “verified” Twitter account went viral and had to be debunked. Striking Writer’s Guild members demand producers pledge not to use AI to generate the content that is their talent, calling, and livelihood. AI is on the go. A couple clicks and it’s on your phone. AI is singing songs and picking stocks. Did I mention Artificial General Intelligence? This is not a joke. This is not science fiction. This is happening.

However, let’s remember that AI is powered by HI - human intelligence. We are still in charge. Until Skynet goes live, AI serves us and it’s time to take a more tempered and practical (and proactive) view of what’s going on. Soon, the feckless U.S. Congress will enter the fray with a slate of ineffective regulations written by the tech industry and we’ll all be paying through the roof to use AI. Meanwhile, AI is the wild west and it just rode into town at high noon with guns blazing.

Right now, there are two players in the new boomtown called AI. Townspeople thrust into the AI world as it roars in like a new train line, and the gunslingers of AI prompt-engineering. The beauty of AI-powered tools like ChatGPT is in their simplicity. It’s a one-step process. You ask a question – a prompt – in the same way you would ask a person and it returns content. However, results may vary. The content is only as good as the prompt. The better the prompt, the better the content. It’s simply that complex.

AI is out there for anyone to use. The more you use it, the better you become at prompting. Chances are your company is already exploring AI technology to accelerate its business goals and it’s only a matter of time until the memo goes out. Chances are greater that memo will be treated with the same warm and fuzzy feelings people get when they’re fired and asked to train their replacement before the door hits them on the way out.

Don’t Panic! Keep calm and embrace the prompt. Once your employer figures out a way AI can benefit the bottom line, like it or not you will need to learn how to use it just like any other application your company uses. Oh, and there may be mandatory training sessions and possibly a new cottage industry of certifications. The good news for the townspeople (this author included) is while Skynet may not be live, Promptnet is. The rise of AI isn’t occurring in a vacuum. Its supporting players are on every corner and in every saloon.

Want to learn the basics or master prompt engineering? YouTube, Coursera, and Udemy have many tutorials and courses to choose from. Or maybe PromptHero is more your speed, which offers courses and is also an online community. Learnprompting.org is another educational resource and online community. Just to name a few.

How about user-rated prewritten prompts? PromptHero, FlowGPT, and Prompts.chat got you covered. Want to buy and sell prompts? PromptBase and Prompt.AI are online prompt marketplaces. Just to name a few. Everybody is moving to boomtown and they’re making it easy for you to apply your human intelligence to learn artificial intelligence.

In the new rugged sexy world of AI prompt engineering, the most important buzzword is money. Money is why this previously non-existent skill is rolling off people’s tongues and into your newsfeed. BusinessInsider reported there was a job listing on Indeed.com for an AI prompt engineer with a salary of $335,000. For some reason, that got people’s attention.

Here are five facts sourced from a comprehensive overview of AI prompt engineering on PCMag.com. A link to the full article follows.

  1. AI Prompt Engineers write prompts to achieve best-of-class results from AI tools and/or write copy to test and teach AI systems.

  2. Currently, there are around 1000 job openings for AI-prompt engineers in the United States and around 200 of them pay six figures.  

  3. The immediate outlook for AI prompt engineers is stellar, but views on their long-term prospects range from ‘prompt-engineering will be a big percentage of jobs’ to ‘prompt engineering is a specialized skill now but will become obsolete’ as AI technology evolves and the system become auto-prompting.

  4. “AI whispering” is slang for prompt engineering because it’s more art form than science. Individuals with above-average writing skills have a head start. The better the prompt, the better the content.

  5. Writing is rewriting. Prompt engineers hone their prompts until they achieve the best results. This requires a mastery of language, rigor, and analytical skills.

Whether a gold rush that will fizzle out or the new literary masters of the Age of AI, prompt engineers are the latest rage. You can deep dive into this topic by reading PCMag.com’s excellent primer, “Weird New Job Alert: What Is an AI Prompt Engineer.


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.