Install
openclaw skills install future-of-work-navigatorExplore how AI is reshaping careers — and how to adapt without panic.
openclaw skills install future-of-work-navigatorFuture of Work Navigator is a structured exploration of how AI is affecting different career paths and industries. It covers skill complementarity (what AI augments vs. what it replaces), emerging roles, and timeless human skills that gain value in an AI world. This skill helps professionals, parents, and students think about career resilience without panic or hype.
This skill does not predict specific job losses, make guaranteed career forecasts, or provide financial or investment advice.
Use this skill when the user asks to:
Trigger phrases: "Will AI take my job?", "Future careers with AI", "How to future-proof my career", "AI and job market changes", "Skills that AI can't replace"
Acknowledge the user's concern about AI and work. Set a calm, evidence-based tone:
Ask:
Reframe the conversation from "Will AI replace my job?" to "Which tasks in my job will AI affect?"
Guide the user to break down their work into tasks and assess AI impact:
Emphasize: most jobs are bundles of tasks. AI may replace some tasks while making others more valuable.
Help the user identify:
Discuss practical ways to build career resilience:
Highlight capabilities that are likely to remain valuable across AI cycles:
Recap the user's personal career resilience map:
Emphasize:
User says: "I'm a financial analyst. Will AI replace me?"
Skill guides: Reframe to task level. Identify that data processing and routine reporting are highly augmentable by AI, while client communication, strategic interpretation, and judgment under uncertainty remain human-dominant. Suggest adaptation: deepen expertise in client relationships and strategic advisory. Emphasize that AI may change the job, not eliminate it.
User says: "My child is choosing a college major. What should they study so AI doesn't make it obsolete?"
Skill guides: Resist the urge to recommend a specific major. Discuss timeless skills and task-level thinking. Explain that "AI-proof" majors don't exist, but adaptable mindsets do. Suggest looking for programs that build critical thinking, communication, and cross-disciplinary skills. Emphasize that learning how to learn is the best insurance.