The organizations getting AI right recognized something early that most are still figuring out. Automating the work is the easy part. Replacing what that work used to teach is a different problem entirely.
Most companies are getting exactly what they optimized for: leaner teams, faster output and senior leaders with more bandwidth for strategic work. What those gains don’t account for is what early-career employees are losing in the process.
The tasks most likely to get labeled menial and handed off to AI are often the same ones that taught junior employees how to read a room, absorb organizational context and develop a feel for what finished work actually looks like in their organization. That learning didn’t happen in onboarding. It happened in the work itself.
Organizations with successful AI rollouts are staying just as intentional about what early-career employees need to develop as they are about what to automate. That means understanding what junior employees are actually losing when foundational work disappears and rebuilding it before it shows up as a leadership problem.

What AI is actually replacing
AI is eating the very tasks that used to be the “training wheels” for junior talent. On a spreadsheet, things
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