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Job Security in an Automated Age

One of my all-time favorite television commercials is the Monster spot that debuted during Super Bowl XXXIII. The ad was effective because it depicted the very opposite of what we aspire to during our formative years. Children in the ad speak as jaded adults with less-than-optimistic expectations for their work futures. Toward its end, the ad poignantly asks, 鈥淲hat did you want to be?鈥 It offers hope, though, in its final frame: 鈥淭here鈥檚 a better job out there.鈥 The ad ran in 1999, but it鈥檚 even more relevant now because of the growing challenges of job security in an automated age.

Skills and Training Are the Currency of the Automated Age

The ultimate point of the Monster ad 鈥 don鈥檛 settle for unsatisfying work 鈥 still resonates loudly. We all want a fulfilling career, but we also want security, so positioning yourself to fulfill both of those needs is a must.

Seismic shifts have occurred in workforce dynamics as automation advances at an exponential rate. In 1999, things such as robotics and artificial intelligence still sounded like science fiction to many of us; now they are part of our vocabulary 鈥 proof that automation has arrived and is here to stay.

? No one knows exactly, but we can prepare by aligning ourselves with trajectories of emerging realities in our particular industries.

The need to recognize and understand innovation is palpable. How can that awareness translate into job security? Use it to identify and pursue the skills and training that will make you a valuable employee.

The goal, after all, is to feel fulfilled and to in an age of developing technologies.

A man wearing a hard hat and goggles holding a laptop

Revolutionary Change Isn鈥檛 New to the Workplace

Revolutionary change brings uncertainty, but workers have experienced significant change at pivotal points in history and learned to adapt. One historic turning point was the , which was both exciting and unsettling.

The notion of machines executing tasks once reserved for humans isn鈥檛 entirely new, is it? In the boom of technology, the same principle applies. We want to possess indispensable skills that aren鈥檛 easily mimicked in a mechanized process.

This is where . Upskilling is the way not merely to survive but also to thrive in an evolving work landscape.

View Automation as a Challenge, not a Threat

Let鈥檚 commit 1999 to memory with the hope that we鈥檙e all pursuing the kind of work we want now that we鈥檙e grown-ups.

Instead of being overwhelmed by cynicism or fear, let鈥檚 keep our eyes wide open and look to the exciting opportunities that will manifest as the automated age unfolds. After all, the automation wonks say there will be a and that the machines will do the dirtiest work.

USF Can Help Position You for Tomorrow鈥檚 Workplace

The automation yields will vary, but many of those jobs will afford adaptable employees the opportunity to move up the workplace food chain. For many, the difference between moving up and being pushed aside lies in the type of continuing education and training that USF鈥檚 Office of Corporate Training and Professional Education can deliver.

To learn more about USF鈥檚 dedication to interacting with professionals and advancing careers, explore the university鈥檚 Office of Corporate Training and Professional Education. Visit the CTPE website or contact us.

Mark Koulianos is director of USF鈥檚 Office of Corporate Training and Professional Education and a 20-plus-year veteran of the corporate world. .

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About Corporate Training and Professional Education

USF Corporate Training and Professional Education empowers people to craft their future without limits through engaging professional growth learning and certification programs. Its programs focus on an array of topics – human resources, project management, paralegal, process improvement, leadership skills, technology, and much more.