The Great Migration: How AI Is Forcing Office Workers to Change Careers
AI is driving large-scale changes in the white-collar labor market. Professionals who spent decades building careers in journalism and marketing are facing a…
AI-processed from Guardian; edited by Hamidun News
# The Great Migration: How AI Is Forcing Office Workers to Change Professions
Jacqueline Bowman knew since she was fourteen what she wanted to do with her life. She started an internship at a local newspaper, obtained a journalism degree, wrote about this and that, and built a freelance career. By thirty, she had a stable income, regular clients, and work that satisfied her. It wasn't a dream of novels, but a reality that paid the bills. And in 2024, that reality collapsed.
From all sides—publication cutbacks, newsroom closures, client exodus. "The work just evaporated," Bowman says. But when some contracts disappeared, other offers arrived, and they all sounded the same: companies offered her services as an editor of content created by artificial intelligence. At half her previous salary. For a volume of work that took twice as much time. At first it seemed logical—editing finished text is faster than writing from scratch. In practice, it was the opposite: cleaning up algorithm errors, restoring narrative gaps, and finding balance between machine coldness and human tone proved not simpler, but far more difficult.
Bowman's story is not an exception, but a warning sign on the horizon for millions of office workers. Artificial intelligence has not invaded factories and construction sites, but places where stability reigned over the last decades: the desk, the marketing department, the newsroom. The wave of automation that once crept up on blue-collar workers now knocks on the door of white-collar workers with the inevitability of a tsunami. And this wave is moving faster than anyone expected.
The paradox is that companies don't simply fire people. They reframe their role, offering them to stay, but in a completely different capacity. Not content creators, but error cleaners. Not strategists, but proofreaders. And most importantly—not for the same money. Salaries are cut in half, while demands for speed and quality of work only increase. This is a form of labor arbitrage, where AI becomes a competitor that works for pennies and never demands vacation. Staying in the profession means accepting humiliating conditions. Leaving means abandoning decades of investment in education and career.
All of this pushes people like Bowman into completely different professions. Traditional trades that cannot be automated by simple algorithms become a refuge. Plumber, electrician, carpenter—these specialties require physical presence, technical thinking, and problem-solving of exactly the kind that AI struggles with. Plus, salaries in these fields often exceed those in degraded content marketing. People who once dreamed of books and publications are starting to study wiring and plumbing.
This is not simply a story about career change. This is a signal about the restructuring of the labor economy, that education and a white collar no longer guarantee either safety or dignity of work. The wave of investment in AI is accompanied by a wave of financial pressure on those whose labor can now be easily replaced. The system says: either accept our conditions or leave. And people leave—not because they don't love their work, but because the system made it impossible to live on.
Want to stop reading about AI and start using it?
AI News is a curated feed of AI/tech news. Hamidun Academy teaches you to use AI systematically in your work.