We are standing at the edge of another tech revolution
AI represents the third major tech revolution (after the internet and mobile), and like previous waves of creative destruction, it will eliminate some jobs while creating entirely new careers and opportunities for those who adapt quickly.
🚀 Standing at the Edge of Another Tech Revolution
I’ve seen this story before: the internet, mobile, and now AI. Each wave has reshaped how we live and work, creating opportunities we never saw coming.
But this time, the speed is different.
AI is moving at a breathtaking pace — what took the internet and mobile years to reach maturity is happening in months. That acceleration changes the rules for how individuals, companies, and entire industries adapt.
🔄 AI Is Creative Destruction — and That’s a Good Thing
Every major technological shift brings creative destruction:
- Some roles disappear.
- Some skills lose value.
- Entire workflows are rewritten.
But history shows that each wave creates more than it destroys.
New industries emerge. Entirely new careers take shape.
Opportunities we could not have imagined become the new normal.
I’ve lived through two of these revolutions:
🌐 The Internet Revolution
The web didn’t just digitize existing industries — it invented new ones.
Search engines, e-commerce, digital marketing, and online marketplaces appeared almost overnight. Careers like SEO specialist, web developer, and UX designer didn’t exist before the mid-90s.
📱 The Mobile Revolution
The App Store democratized software.
A single developer could build an app and reach millions without a sales team. Entire industries were reshaped as mobile-first companies disrupted entrenched players.
New careers emerged — product design, app monetization, push notifications, mobile analytics — none of which existed before 2008.
Content creation also transformed:
- Self-publishing removed gatekeepers.
- YouTube and TikTok made global broadcasters out of anyone.
- Streaming gave independent musicians worldwide reach.
🤖 Now, It’s AI’s Turn
AI is moving even faster than those waves. It will:
- Automate repetitive work
- Augment high-skill roles
- Unlock careers we can’t yet define
Some job titles may sound strange today — just like “social media manager” did a decade ago. Soon, they’ll be obvious.
👩💻 A Personal Perspective
My daughter is in college studying computer programming. She’s smart, driven, and passionate about building things. I often think about what her career will look like in 5, 10, or 20 years.
Will some of the skills she’s learning be automated? Almost certainly.
Will AI also give her superpowers to create, innovate, and solve problems beyond today’s limits? Absolutely.
And here’s my advice to her — and anyone starting out in tech today:
Learn how to learn.
Don’t anchor yourself to today’s tools, frameworks, or languages.
Build the muscle of adaptability, creativity, and problem-solving.
Because in a world where roles will keep changing, the ability to reinvent yourself again and again will matter more than any single skill you learn today.
⚡ The Future of Work Is About Readiness
AI is lowering the barrier to innovation, putting powerful tools in the hands of individuals who can now build and compete at scales once reserved for the largest companies.
The winners will be those who:
- Adapt as tools evolve
- Spot opportunities before they’re obvious
- Blend technical fluency with creativity and problem-solving
This is where grit comes in — the passion and perseverance to keep learning, keep experimenting, and keep moving forward, even when the ground shifts beneath you.
🏁 The Big Question
The question isn’t if your role will change — it will.
The real question is:
Will you be ready to step into the roles that don’t exist yet?
If you enjoyed this post, follow along as I continue sharing thoughts on technology, AI, and the future of work.
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