AI & Work: What Adults Need to Understand Now

AI & Work: What Adults Need to Understand Now

Artificial Intelligence is not something coming in the future, it’s already changing how work gets done.

Not in five years. Not someday.

Right now.

If you’ve come across Matt Shumer’s article Something Big is Happening,” this page builds on that same idea.

The pace of change is faster than most people expect, and faster than most organizations are prepared for.

But this isn’t just about work.

It’s about the world students are preparing to enter.

What’s Changing

For a long time, technology helped us do things faster.

AI is different.

It can now:

  • write
  • analyze
  • summarize
  • create
  • problem-solve

Tasks that used to take hours can now take minutes.

Tasks that used to require teams can now be done by one person.

This isn’t just a productivity shift.
It’s a shift in how work gets done, and what skills matter.

The Shift Most People Are Missing

Most conversations about AI still sound like this:

“AI might replace jobs someday.”

That’s not the real shift.

The real shift is this:

AI is already changing how work gets done, job by job, task by task.

  • Fewer steps between idea and output
  • Less need for repetitive work
  • More emphasis on direction, judgment, and decision-making

The question is no longer:
“Will AI impact jobs?”

It’s:
“How is AI already changing expectations for work and performance?”

Why This Matters for Adults

Even if you’re not thinking about AI in your own job, it’s already shaping expectations around you.

  • Work is happening faster
  • Output is easier to produce
  • The bar for what’s considered “good” is changing

And most importantly:

This is the environment students are watching.

They are learning, right now, what it means to work, produce, and succeed in a world where AI exists.

What This Means for Kids

Students are not preparing for the same future adults experienced.

They are growing up in a world where:

  • Answers are immediate
  • Content can be generated instantly
  • Effort and output are no longer directly connected

That creates a different developmental environment.

Skills like:

  • focus
  • problem-solving
  • persistence
  • communication

don’t develop automatically in the same way they used to.

This is where the connection between AI and youth becomes critical.

The Risk of Waiting

You don’t need to panic, but waiting has a cost.

Some of the biggest risks right now:

  • Assuming this doesn’t apply to your role
  • Ignoring it because it feels overwhelming
  • Not understanding the environment kids are growing up in
  • Waiting until it becomes a problem to address it

The gap is already forming between people who are paying attention and people who are not.

What Actually Matters Moving Forward

It’s not about becoming an expert in every tool.

It’s about understanding the shift.

Learning how to ask better questions
AI responds to direction. That’s becoming a core skill.

Understanding how work is changing
Not just what tools exist, but how expectations are shifting.

Staying adaptable
The pace of change will continue.

Maintaining human skills
Communication, judgment, and relationships still matter, and in many cases, matter more.

Recognizing the connection to youth
The way adults respond to AI shapes how kids understand it.

Where to Start

You don’t need to dive deep into every tool.

Start with awareness.

  • Pay attention to how AI is being used around you
  • Try one tool to understand how it works (ChatGPT, Claude, Grok)
  • Reflect on what feels helpful vs. what replaces thinking

And most importantly:

Think about what this means for the students, children, and young adults in your life.

What to Watch Moving Forward

You don’t need to keep up with everything, but a few trends are clear:

  • AI will continue to improve quickly
  • Expectations for speed and output will increase
  • Roles and skills will continue to shift
  • The line between real and generated content will continue to blur

The pace is not slowing down.

Resources to Help You Get Started

If you’re trying to make sense of this in a practical way, start here:

Your Digital Navigator
A custom GPT designed to help you think through real situations involving AI, kids, and decision-making.
It’s not about quick answers, it’s about helping you understand what something means before reacting.
You’ll just need a free ChatGPT account to use it—no paid subscription required.
👉 Give it a try!

Community Training: The AI Age: Youth, Technology, Social Media, Safety, & Mental Health
If you’re looking to bring this conversation to your school, organization, or community, this training focuses on how AI is impacting youth, development, and the environments they are growing up in.
👉 Read more about it!

For Employers and Organizations

AI is changing the workplace, but it’s also changing the people entering it.

Students are developing in a different environment than previous generations.

They are learning, creating, and communicating in a world where AI is always available.

That has implications for:

  • how they approach work
  • how they handle challenges
  • how they communicate
  • how they develop independence

Organizations don’t just need to understand AI.

They need to understand the people who are growing up with it.

This is where the conversation becomes important.

Not just:
“How does AI change our work?”

But:
“What does this mean for the next generation entering our workforce?”

That’s the perspective I bring into trainings—helping organizations, schools, and communities understand how these shifts are shaping behavior, expectations, and development.

👉 Learn more about bringing this training to your organization.

Final Thought

This isn’t just about technology.

It’s about the environment people are growing up and working in.

AI is not replacing the need for people.

But it is changing what it means to learn, work, and stay relevant.

The earlier we understand that shift, the better prepared we are—for ourselves and for the next generation.

~Ryan