GPT-5 Can Replace 91% of Jobs in 2026… (WAKE UP NOW)
23:04

GPT-5 Can Replace 91% of Jobs in 2026… (WAKE UP NOW)

AI Master 10.07.2025 14 455 просмотров 323 лайков обн. 18.02.2026
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#sponsored Try Pipedrive for FREE! https://aff.trypipedrive.com/AIMaster 🚀 Become an AI Master – All-in-one AI Learning https://aimaster.me/jnd1d5waxv4 📹Get a Custom Promo Video From AI Master https://collab.aimaster.me/ In this video, we discuss the impending impact of artificial intelligence on the future of work, highlighting potential job loss and shifts in employment trends. We explore how automation may affect various sectors and the importance of upskilling to adapt to the workforce of tomorrow. Discover the potential for ai collaboration to navigate the changing job market landscape. Chapters: 0:00 - Intro 1:12 - Job 1 3:20 - Job 2 6:35 - Job 3 9:03 - Job 4 11:47 - Job 5 15:12 - Job 6 18:07 - Job 7 21:27 - What's next?

Оглавление (9 сегментов)

  1. 0:00 Intro 200 сл.
  2. 1:12 Job 1 371 сл.
  3. 3:20 Job 2 530 сл.
  4. 6:35 Job 3 420 сл.
  5. 9:03 Job 4 487 сл.
  6. 11:47 Job 5 577 сл.
  7. 15:12 Job 6 522 сл.
  8. 18:07 Job 7 582 сл.
  9. 21:27 What's next? 307 сл.
0:00

Intro

Did you know that about 80% of US workers could have at least 10% of their job tasks taken over by AI in the very near future? Yeah, 80%. That's basically most of us. And nearly one in five people might see half of their duties handed over to machines. Let that sink in for a second. I'm not here to scare anyone. Okay, maybe a little to wake you up. But this stat shows how widespread AI's impact is going to be. And we're not just talking factory or warehouse jobs. We're talking white collar jobs, too. Finance, law, media, you name it. AI is creeping into all of them. Even some creative work isn't off limits. So, if you're thinking, will AI take my job by 2026? You're not alone in asking that. I want to walk you through nine types of jobs that might disappear or at least drastically change because of AI by 2026. Now, disappear doesn't always mean everyone in that field gets fired overnight. Often, it means the RO gets transformed. All right, enough preamble. Let's dive into the first and maybe most obvious group of jobs on the AI chopping block. clerical roles
1:12

Job 1

the data entry clerks, office administrators, you know, the unsung heroes keeping offices running by handling all the repetitive stuff, typing in numbers, scheduling meetings, organizing files, sending out those happy birthday emails, all that routine grind. Well, those repetitive tasks are exactly what AI excels at. Think about it. We already have software that can automatically input data or scan documents faster and with fewer typos than a person. Calendar scheduling assistance powered by AI can set up your meetings while you sleep. Ever notice how some appointment reminders or follow-up emails don't seem to come from a person? Yep, that's an AI doing basic admin work. It's efficient. It doesn't take lunch breaks and it never goes home at 5:00 p. m. So, what does that mean if you are a data entry clerk or admin? It means the nature of your job is likely to change. Instead of manually entering invoices or copy pasting info all day, you might find yourself overseeing an AI that does it for you. Basically checking its work or handling the odd situations the AI can figure out. One human admin with good tech skills could potentially do what a whole team used to thanks to smart software. Companies notice that and they are already reorganizing how clerical support works. Now, I won't sugarcoat it. Some traditional clerical positions are going to shrink in number, but it's not game over if this is your field. In fact, it can be an opportunity. Learn to work with the AI tools, and you instantly become more valuable. You could be the person who knows how to set up the automation to fix it when it goes haywire, and handle the complex tasks that still need a human touch. In our AI master community, we've seen former office assistants rebrand themselves as automation specialists after picking up some new skills. It's the kind of career pivot we talk about a lot in our courses. Turning what looks like a threat into a new career boost. So, if you are in a clerical role, don't panic. Start planning. The administrative jobs of 2026 won't be the same as today. There's definitely a role for people who adapt.
3:20

Job 2

Next on the list are the number crunchers, bookkeepers, and accountants. If you are in this field, you've probably already seen software eaten into bits of your job. Think about how bookkeeping used to be stacks of ledgers and long hours of data entry. Now we have tools like QuickBooks that automatically categorize transactions. An AI that can scan receipts and invoices so you don't have to enter them by hand. The boring parts of accounting, reconciling accounts, generating basic financial reports, flagging unusual transactions, those are all getting handed over to algorithms. AI is getting really good at routine accounting tasks. Need to cross-check thousands of entries for errors and AI can do that in seconds without coffee breaks. Preparing a draft tax return or a financial statement, AI can pull in the numbers and even write a first pass analysis. There are even AI auditors on the horizon that can sniff out fraud by recognizing patterns humans might miss. It's like having an extremely diligent, if somewhat soulless, junior accountant on staff 24/7. Is there better proof that AI is really wiping out repetitive roles, data entry clerks, schedulers, even some customer support gigs are in the chopping block? Goldman Sachs says up to 300 million jobs could feel that heat worldwide. Pipe Drive, a sponsor of today's video and the first CRM built by sales people for sales people. Proves not every tool is coming for your job. It kills the busy work instead. While AI automates the routine, Pipe Drive smart automations keep your pipeline humming so you can double down on the human stuff, building relationships and strategy. Picture a drag and drop canon style board that shows every deal, next step, and owner at a glance. Users closed 28% more deals in their first year after switching. And because this video is all about AI, Pipe Drive's built-in intelligence now scores leads, summarizes conversations, and even drafts email replies, the kind of micro tasks that steal hours and morale. It also plugs into 350 plus popular business apps, so all your data finally lives in one place. No extra tabs, no extra headaches. Ready to future proof your roll? Hit the special link below. Start a 21-day free trial, no credit card, and lock in an exclusive 20% off discount when you subscribe. Don't let AI make you obsolete. Let it make you unstoppable with Pipe Drive. So, does this mean accountants are out of a job? Not exactly, but the job is definitely changing. The role of a human accountant is shifting more towards analysis and strategy and less about punching in numbers. But for those in the profession, mastering these AI tools can make you more efficient and valuable. Just imagine telling your boss, I used an AI to finish the monthly report in 2 hours instead of 2 days. That's a win. The spreadsheet warriors of the future are the ones who can dance with AI, checking its work, guiding it, and then doing the creative problem solving. Only a human can do. So, keep that calculator handy, but maybe give it a smart AI assistant to turbocharge what you do.
6:35

Job 3

Moving on to customer support, which is a big one. We've all had those experiences chatting with what we thought was a helpful support agent, only to realize later it was an AI chatbot. And if you haven't noticed, that just means the AI is getting really good at his job. Companies are heavily investing in AIdriven customer service. those friendly and sometimes frustrating chat bubbles on websites. The voice on the phone that actually understands what you're asking. Finally, and even AI that can write polite apology emails when something goes wrong. The reason is simple. A lot of customer support is answering the same common questions over and over. How do I reset my password? Where's my order? What's your refund policy? These are the kinds of questions an AI can handle 24/7 without ever getting tired or upset. It doesn't call in sick and it can simultaneously chat with 100 people at once. From a business perspective, that's a dream. We're already seeing companies saying their AI chatbots are handling like 60 70% of support tickets, only passing you to a human when things get complicated. So, what happens to the human support reps? Their jobs aren't completely vanishing, but they are changing shape big time. Instead of feeling every simple call or chat, human agents now often step in only for the hard stuff, the angry customers, the weird problems that the bot has no clue about or the situations that need a real empathetic touch. In a way, the front line of support is becoming these AI systems with humans as the second line, the specialists. That likely means fewer total support agents needed for the easy questions. But the ones who remain will be handling higher level support and probably juggling AI tools themselves to find answers fast. If you work in customer service, it's a good time to start getting comfortable with AI. Think of it as your new co-worker. You might end up supervising a whole fleet of chatbot agents, training them with better answers or analyzing where they mess up so you can step in. The scale of the future here isn't just being polite on the phone. It's managing and collaborating with AI to make sure customers stay happy. The human touch still matters a lot, but it will be reserved for when it's really needed. Meanwhile, the AI will take care of have you tried turn it off and on again on repeat. Now, let's talk about content creation.
9:03

Job 4

Yes, I mean everyone from copywriters and bloggers to YouTubers and marketers. This is an area where AI is both exciting and unsettling. On one hand, these AI tools are like having a creative sidekick who never runs out of ideas. Need a blog post draft? Chad GBT can whip one up in seconds. Need a catchy slogan or product description. There are AI fine-tuned just for that. Want an image for your article or a quick graphic for social media? Boom. Tools like MidJourney or Dolly can generate one with a simple prompt. Some new sites even use AI to write basic sports recaps or stock reports. It's like content on tap whenever you need it. But on the other hand, if you are a content creator, might feel like, uh-oh, is the robot coming for my creative job? The truth is AI can turn out tons of content, but it doesn't mean all of it is good or that it truly resonates with people. The internet might get flooded with AI written articles and AI made videos, but humans can tell or eventually will tell when something's missing that genuine spark or insight. The real value of human creators now is shifting to things like personal voice, regional perspectives, storytelling, and connecting dots in ways AI just can't. If you are a writer or artist, you might use AI for the heavy lifting, brainstorming ideas, generating drafts or visuals. Then you come in and polish it. Add that special sauce. Fact check it. Make it truly unique. In other words, your job evolves into more of an editor or creative director working with AI assistants. Now, I have to say, as a content creator myself, I'm actually optimistic. I use AI tools all the time to speed up my workflow. They help me do more so I can focus on the fun parts, creativity and strategy. In fact, these tools are so gamechanging that we built an entire content creators toolkit in the AMR membership to help folks navigate this. If you're watching this and you want to learn how to leverage AI instead of getting left behind, we've got you covered. Our membership gives you courses and tutorials on things like using Chad GBT for research, Medjourney for design, even AI video editors. And the best part, right now you can grab 63% off your first year as a member. It's a ridiculously good deal we're running for a short time. Basically, my way of saying, I want you to join our community without breaking the bank. Just hit the link below if you are interested. The bottom line for content creators is this. AI can feel like competition, but it can also be your power up. Those who learn to ride this wave are going to create more and better stuff than ever. Those who don't, well, they might struggle to keep up.
11:47

Job 5

All right, let's switch over to designers, graphic designers, illustrators, even UIUX folks to an extent. If you've been on the internet in last year, you've seen the explosion of AI generated images, models like Midjourney, Dolly, and Stable Diffusion can create artwork or concept designs from a simple text prompt. Need a logo draft? Need a futuristic landscape illustration for your game concept? Type in a few keywords and bam, the AI paints it for you. Suddenly, someone with zero drawing skills can produce something that looks pretty darn good. No design school, no years of practice. Just make me a picture of X and wait 30 seconds. For professional designers, this is equal parts amazing and terrifying. Amazing because these tools can supercharge your creative process. You can prototype ideas faster than ever. terrifying because clients might say, "Why should I pay a designer for this simple graphic when I can have an AI crank out 10 options for free? " Ouch. Right? We're already seeing businesses use AI to generate social media graphics, simple ads, mockups, you name it. Sometimes without a designer in the loop at all. Template websites and AI design tools are trying to make it so easy that anyone can create a halfway decent design. For many routine design needs, this is good enough. and way faster, cheaper than hiring an artist. Companies know this. One analysis pointed out that creative fields like photography and illustration are among those generative AI can automate relatively easily. Keeping even a tiny in-house design squad, say two juniors and one senior, can cost at least $120,000 a year. Shifting routine banners to AI while a seasoned designer polishes the winners, can save about 50K annually. huge for any small business. That's why our course already packs battle tested prompt strategies for image generation, helping teams slash turnaround time and protect marketing budgets right now. But before we declare the death of the designer, let's get real. Design isn't just about slapping elements together. The best designers solve problems and tell stories visually. In a way, an AI alone can do, at least not yet. AI image generators also have plenty of quirks. Ever seen an AI try to draw human hands? Yeah, enjoy those sixfingered specials. They might give you a cool image, but is it on brand? Is it original in concept or just a mashup of what's already out there? That's where human designers come in. The future designer's job might involve generating a bunch of AI images as a starting point, then picking the best one and refining it. We're using AI to handle tedious parts like quickly generating varants of an idea while focusing more on the creative direction and the details that really matter. If you are a designer, my advice is embrace these tools as new creative assistants. They're not here to completely replace your creativity. They are here to remove some grunt work and even inspire. Learn to guide the AI. Good prompting is like a new kind of artistry. In the end, the designers who thrive will be those who combine their human originality with AI super speed. The ones who stick to the old ways for every little task. They might find themselves losing clients to those six-fingered AI creations. Well, kid in mostly, but so use the AI, but keep your unique human touch in the mix. That's something no algorithm can steal.
15:12

Job 6

Now, on to the legal field. Parallegals and even junior lawyers. If you thought drafting contracts or sifting through case law was a safe gig, well, AI has entered the chat, or should I say the court, tools like AI legal assistance or emerging that can do a first pass on tasks that used to keep young associates busy all night. I'm talking about scanning through hundreds of documents for relevant info, reviewing, discovery evidence, even drafting simple contracts or legal briefs. In fact, you might have heard one of the latest AI models basically passed the bar exam. It performed about as well as top law school grads on that test. That's a wake-up call if there ever was one. For parallegals, a big part of the job is research and document prep. AI can now pull up case precedents and summarize them in plain English in seconds. Need a particular clause? An AI can search a database of contracts faster than any human and spit out the clause you need. Routine legal letters or motions? Yep, AI can draft those, too. Some law firms are already using AI for contract review. It flags risky terms or errors and the human just doublech checkcks and edits. So the volume of grunt work in law is getting a tech assist big time. But and this is a big butt, the legal industry runs in precision, judgment, and trust. AI has a known habit of hallucinating, making stuff up if you ask it the wrong way. There was that hilarious but not hilarious case of a lawyer who submitted a brief full of fake case citations because he relied on Chad GBT without checking. Oops. No law firm wants to be embarrassed like that or risk a client's case in an unchecked AI output. So while AI will handle a lot of the heavy lifting, human lawyers are still very much in play to verify, argue, and add the nuanced reasoning that the machine doesn't truly understand. What does this mean for legal support roles? Likely fewer entrylevel positions focus purely on drudge work. If you are a parallegal, you might not be spending weeks in the law library or eyeballing every line of contract. The AI will do the first sweep. Instead, your role could shift to managing the AI outputs, checking for errors, doing the more analytical tasks, and coordinating with the attorneys on strategy. And if you are a junior attorney, you will need to bring more to the table than the ability to draft a basic memo because an AI can do that. Now, focus on hone in the skills AI lacks. client interaction, courtroom skills, strategic thinking, and ethical judgment. Those who use AI as a tool, maybe you become the go-to person in your firm for the latest legal tech, will thrive. Those who try to ignore it might find themselves stuck doing tasks that have been mostly automated or worse, outpaced by colleagues who embraced the tech. So, to all the legal eagles, the gabble hasn't dropped on your careers, but the game is definitely changing.
18:07

Job 7

changing. Last but not least, let's talk about coders. Software developers were probably some of the first to start experimenting with AI in their workflow, and the results are both impressive and a little unnerving. With tools like GitHub, Copilot, ChatGBT, and other code generators, AI can actually write chunks of code for you. You type a comment like function to sort a list of names alphabetically, and boom, the code appears as if by magic. It can even find books or suggest improvements in your code. It's like having an eager junior developer pair programming with you at all times. Copilot, for example, lives in your code editor and autocompletes chunks of code as you write. It's trained on billions of lines of code, so it often knows what you're trying to do. Now, multiply that by hundreds of little tasks a developer does in a week. The result is a huge productivity boost. A survey by Stack Overflow in 2023 found 76% of developers were already using or planning to use AI coding tools. That was in 2023. And using AI app building tools is easier than you think. So, will AI replace developers entirely? I'd say no, but it's definitely reshaping the job. We've moved from Googling Stack Overflow for an hour to just asking the AI for a solution in 30 seconds. Productivity can go through the roof. You can build features faster now because the AI handles the boilerplate stuff or helps you remember syntax you'd otherwise have to look up. In fact, some companies are noticing their devs are way more productive using AI, meaning maybe they don't need as many developers to get the same work done. Ouch job count, but great for efficiency. But AI doesn't truly understand the code it writes. Not like a human does. It might turn out something that works for the examples it saw, but break when you use it in a slightly different way. It can also write insecure or sub-optimal code if you're not careful. Have you ever had that experience where an AI gives you code and you're like, "Hm, that's clever, but also kind of weird. You still need a human brain to review and test thoroughly to design the overall architecture and to decide what needs to be built in the first place. AI isn't taking over your stand-up meetings and talking to clients about feature requirements, at least not this year. What we will see by 2026 is the role of the developer evolving. If you're a programmer, you'll spend less time typing out routine code, and more time orchestrating, thinking through problems, integrating different pieces, some of which AI wrote, and checking that it all actually works together. Higher level developer roles, the people who can see the big picture, ensure quality and innovate new ideas, those will remain in high demand. The key is to collaborate with AI, not compete against it. Write the tricky 10% of code that AI can handle. Use AI to handle the 90% that is repetitive, and you will be golden. In short, the best programmers of tomorrow might not write every line by hand, but they will know exactly what to ask the AI to write and how to fix it when the AI inevitably messes up. So, what's the big takeaway? Honestly, it's that change is the only constant. Some jobs will shrink or even disappear. New ones will pop up and almost every
21:27

What's next?

job will evolve in some way. This isn't the first time we've seen a tech revolution. Think about how the internet changed everything or smartphones. AI is another revolution just turbocharged. And like every other time, those who adapt will find new opportunities. And those who stick their heads in the sand, well, they might get left behind. But you're not alone in this. Millions of people are asking the same question. How do I make sure AI works for me, not against me? The fact that you're here means you're already ahead of a lot of folks. The key is to stay curious and keep learning. Maybe that means upping your skills. Maybe it means finding ways to use AI as your assistant rather than seeing it as your enemy. Remember, at the end of the day, AI is a tool, a very powerful tool, but it still needs direction, creativity, and oversight from us humans. I'd love to hear what you think. Is your job or dream job on the list we talked about? How do you feel about the rise of AI in your field? Excited, nervous, or a bit of both? Drop a comment below and let's get a conversation going. share your story or even just your biggest worry or hope when it comes to AI and work. I read as many comments as I can. And if you want to dive deeper or connect with others in the same boat, come join our AI master community. We have people from all sorts of careers, designers, accountants, developers, you name it. Whether you join us there or not, the point is don't go through this alone. Talk to people, get informed, and try things out. So, keep an open mind, stay safe, stay smart, and I'll catch you in the next video.

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