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Right now, many people are worried that artificial intelligence (AI) is coming for their jobs. If you’re one of them, then the recent study by Microsoft will shed some light on how AI’s generative capabilities will impact your field of work. In short, some occupations are more susceptible to its influence than others.
This study is making waves because, unlike previous studies, it draws insight from real-world data. Microsoft looked at 200,000 anonymous Copilot conversations from 2024 and mapped them against the U.S. government’s job classification system.
The study also identified entire occupational groups, like “computer and mathematical occupations” and “office and administrative support”, among those with the highest AI overlap. The results reveal exactly which careers AI is already touching and which ones it barely affects.
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A man walking to his job in a financial district. Positions like advertising sales agents and market research analysts face the greatest likelihood of AI integration, according to a recent Microsoft study. (Ivan Alvarado)
Is AI Going To Replace You?
The result of the study was the calculation of an “AI applicability score.” It measures how closely certain job activities align with the capabilities of AI. To no one’s surprise, knowledge-based and communication-heavy roles were at the top of the list of jobs that are most impacted. At the bottom of this list were jobs requiring physical labor or machine operation, showing minimal overlap.
This score reflects overlap, not guaranteed job loss. The researchers stressed that no occupation is fully performed by AI. The study focuses only on language-based generative AI (like Copilot), not other AI areas such as robotics or autonomous systems, which could affect different roles.
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Why High AI Overlap Doesn’t Always Mean Job Loss
The researchers emphasized that it’s important to differentiate between overlap and replacement. Overlap means the AI performs certain tasks alongside humans, while replacement means it will take their place. The study makes no predictions about job growth or losses. It’s simply a snapshot of where AI fits in today. In fact, historical trends suggest that automation can sometimes add jobs instead of taking them away. So, it’s not all gloom and doom even in sectors with high overlap.

Two men give a presentation at a meeting on data and AI integration. Jobs deemed “most impacted” by AI indicate that technology can take over portions of an employee’s daily tasks. (Frank Rumpenhorst)
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Top Jobs Most At Risk From AI, According To Microsoft
These are the jobs that show a great deal of overlap:
- Technical writers
- Ticket agents and travel clerks
- Editors
- Telemarketers
- Broadcast announcers and radio DJs
- Mathematicians
- Political scientists
- Interpreters and translators
- Advertising sales agents
- CNC tool programmers
- News analysts, reporters, and journalists
- Customer service representatives
- Historians
- Farm and home management educators
- Business teachers, postsecondary
- Hosts and hostesses
- Public relations specialists
- Concierges
- Brokerage clerks
- Proofreaders and copy Markers
- Writers and authors
- Sales representatives (services)
- Telephone operators
- Demonstrators and product promoters
- Passenger attendants
- Data scientists
- Market research analysts
- Web developers
- Management analysts
Jobs Least Likely To Be Replaced By AI Right Now
- If you do any of the jobs below, you have the least to worry about:
- Medical equipment preparers
- Surgical assistants
- Dishwashers
- Roofers
- Massage therapists
- Cement masons and concrete finishers
- Motorboat operators
- Orderlies
- Floor sanders and finishers
- Bridge and lock tenders
- Industrial truck and tractor operators
- Gas compressor and pumping station operators
- Helpers-roofers
- Roustabouts, oil and gas
- Ophthalmic medical technicians
- Packaging and filling machine operators
- Logging equipment operators
- Dredge operators
- Pile driver operators
- Water treatment plant and system operators
- Foundry mold and coremakers
- Machine feeders and offbearers
- Rail-track maintenance equipment operators
- Supervisors of firefighters
- Tire builders
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What This Means For You
If your job appears in the “most impacted” list, it doesn’t mean you need to panic or start packing up your desk. It means AI is already capable of handling parts of your daily tasks – and that can be an opportunity if you learn to use it. Those who embrace AI tools now can work faster, free up time for creative thinking, and make themselves even more valuable.
If your role is on the “least impacted” list, don’t assume you’re immune forever. While physical and hands-on jobs have less overlap with AI today, future technologies beyond language models, like robotics or AI-driven machinery, could change that picture. Staying adaptable, learning basic AI skills, and keeping up with tech trends will help you stay ahead no matter your industry.
In short, treat this study as a career weather forecast, not a doomsday prediction. AI might not replace you, but someone who knows how to work with AI could. The smartest move? Learn to be that person.

While jobs such as writers and editors are heavily impacted by AI, there are currently no predictions of mass unemployment from the technology’s rise. (Liz Hafalia/The San Francisco Chronicle)
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Kurt’s Key Takeaways
As of now, it seems there are no predictions of mass unemployment due to the rise of AI. However, the study does highlight that impacted areas may evolve. A good example is how bank tellers still exist even though we have ATMs. They just redefined the role of tellers, and this is what will happen with generative AI in various fields. And who knows? AI may even give rise to entirely new professions. So it helps professionals in high-overlap fields to see AI as a collaborator.
Is your career safe from AI or already in its sights? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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