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AI Is Eliminating Entry-Level Jobs. Who Trains Tomorrow’s Experts?

AI Is Eliminating Entry-Level Jobs. Who Trains Tomorrow’s Experts?

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Everyone’s excited about AI replacing tasks. Almost nobody is talking about what happens when there’s nobody left to learn those tasks in the first place. Nick explores a growing workforce problem: if AI removes the bottom rung of the career ladder, where do future experts come from? The real risk isn’t job loss. It’s talent loss. AI adoption, skills-based hiring, workforce development, quality of hire, recruiting, future of work. This conversation challenges some of the biggest assumptions about automation and hiring. In this episode… Nick hares why skills-based hiring is accelerating, why AI may create a future talent shortage, and why companies should focus on ability over pedigree. Sharp discussion on hiring bias, quality of hire, AI adoption, workforce planning, and the unintended consequences of automation. Key Takeaways : • Nick argues AI should support hiring decisions, not make them entirely, because hiring still requires human judgment and nuance • “Humans first” remains his preferred approach to hiring despite rapid advances in AI • AI can improve bad processes, but it can also make bad processes fail faster if organizations do not redesign them first • The panel believes bias will never disappear completely from hiring, whether decisions are made by humans, AI, or both • Nick suggests hiring bias should move toward demonstrated ability and skill rather than pedigree, school names, or previous employers • The conversation draws an important distinction between preference and hiring bias, arguing transparency matters when evaluating candidates • Gartner surveyed more than 110 HR leaders and found growing concern that AI could eliminate many traditional entry-level roles • According to the discussion, AI is expected to create more jobs than it replaces, but many of those jobs may require different skills than today’s entry-level work • One major concern: if junior employees never enter the workforce, organizations may struggle to develop future senior talent • William argues entry-level work will evolve rather than disappear, with future workers managing AI systems instead of performing repetitive tasks • The panel predicts experience will become a weaker proxy for talent as skills-based hiring gains momentum • Gartner data discussed on the show suggested roughly 40% of surveyed organizations had already eliminated roles they considered obsolete, many of them entry-level positions • Nick believes skills assessments will become increasingly important as organizations look for proof of capability rather than relying on resumes and tenure alone Guest : Nick Leslie Co-Founder and CEO of Canditech, helping organizations hire based on demonstrated skills through job simulations and assessments that identify who can actually do the job before they get it. LinkediN : https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickleslieprofile/ Connect with Us : William Tincup LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tincup/ Ryan Leary LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanleary/ WRKdefined : Site: http://www.wrkdefined.com TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@wrkdefined LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/wrkdefined Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WRKdefined/ Twitter (X): https://twitter.com/WRKdefined Substack: https://wrkdefined.substack.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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