Just a year ago, the media flooded us with sensational headlines claiming that artificial intelligence would steal all our jobs. Over time, these fears were heavily fueled, yet few analyzed hard statistics or measured the actual impact of AI on the job market. Everyone was asking: "When will an algorithm replace me?", instead of focusing on how to use AI in daily tasks and how to collaborate with it effectively.
Today, we can clearly see that the visions of mass unemployment were exaggerated. We are moving from a phase of panic to an era of pragmatism. Rather than laying people off, modern AI tools in business are forcing them to modify existing habits and master new competencies. The predicted apocalypse turned out to be simply a technological revolution.
How Has the Perception of Artificial Intelligence Changed?
Not long ago, Bill Gates mapped out an extremely rigorous vision of the future. According to his forecasts, process automation was supposed to hit the market so hard that only three sectors would remain safe: energy, medical biology, and a narrow group of AI development experts. It was a narrative based on the complete replacement of humans by machines.
However, May 2026 brought a public admission of error from the head of OpenAI himself. Sam Altman admitted that these catastrophic predictions did not come true. He noted that despite a massive technological leap, the wholesale elimination of jobs did not happen. Why? Because the automatic generation of content or code did not replace the unique human voice, context, empathy, and business responsibility.
The Impact of AI on the Job Market - What Do the Hard Data Say?
There is no denying that layoffs in the technology sector are taking place. According to the Layoffs.fyi tracker, over 118,000 people were laid off in the tech industry in the first half of 2026 alone, and the SkillSyncer platform indicates that more than half of these processes were justified by the implementation of algorithms.
However, the devil is in the details: market analyses (including those published by The Guardian) show that large corporations often use the topic of AI as a convenient justification for the stock market and investors. Companies are cutting headcount after a period of pandemic overhiring to free up capital for incredibly expensive infrastructure and graphics processors.
On the other hand, World Economic Forum reports estimate that by 2030, artificial intelligence will eliminate 92 million simple, repetitive jobs, but at the same time, it will create as many as 170 million new jobs. This results in a net positive balance of 78 million new positions.
Data from the Hiring Lab platform confirm this trend: the number of job postings requiring AI-related competencies has increased by 130%. What's more, specialists who know how to implement AI in a company earn, on average, more today than their colleagues working in a traditional way.
In Which Industries Has the Automation of Business Processes Changed the Most?
In certain industries, it is impossible not to notice the distinct impact of AI, both on the employment structure and the methods of performing daily duties. Marketing, software development, and customer service are among these industries.
Copywriting and Marketing
AI has taken over the mass creation of repetitive SEO texts or simple posts. The marketer's role has shifted toward strategy, fact-checking, and providing a unique, human tone of voice.
Programming
Tools like GitHub Copilot write massive amounts of repetitive code today. Programmers have not disappeared – they have become system architects and code auditors. Logical thinking matters now, not typing lines of code from memory.
Customer Service
The first line of support has been automated in many companies by advanced LLM chatbots. Human agents step in only in difficult, non-standard situations that require high empathy.
How We Do It at Primotly
Since the popularization of AI tools, we have not replaced a single employee with a machine. At the same time, we have experienced firsthand how to use artificial intelligence wisely to avoid costly mistakes and burning budgets.
It is a tool with which you simply have to learn to cooperate. AI performs simple and repetitive tasks for us. Thanks to this, our team has more time for what matters most: creativity, critical thinking, building relationships with clients, and strategy. Instead of downsizing the team, we have increased our efficiency.
If you want to learn more about our philosophy of common-sense AI usage and how to wisely introduce optimizations in business, we invite you to listen to our webinar.
Tools Are Meant to Be Used (Wisely)
AI will not replace humans. But humans using AI will replace humans who do not. The real challenge of modern business is not oncoming unemployment, but a lack of proper skills. The companies that win will be those that, instead of looking for savings in headcount reductions, focus on the synergy between human intellect and artificial intelligence.