CEO survey: AI may protect older workers from layoffs
Older workers are usually among the first to be hit by layoffs. But a CEO survey points to an unexpected trend: with AI, the situation may turn in their favor.

During waves of layoffs, older workers typically get cut first. But a new survey of company executives suggests that AI implementation could reverse that situation.
Why AI Changes the Rules
When companies implement artificial intelligence, they're not just looking for people who can quickly master a new tool. They need employees who understand how AI integrates into existing processes, can assess risks, and manage the transition. This requires experience. Experienced workers who have lived through several technological shifts often better understand how to transform an organization without breaking it. They know where to tread carefully and where they can experiment.
What's Valued in AI Transformation
- The ability to see the whole system, not just individual tasks
- Experience managing change and resistance from colleagues
- Understanding where AI will help and where it will create problems
- Connections and reputation within the organization
- Mentoring skills for younger employees with new tools
How It Works in Practice
Companies that take AI seriously often choose senior employees for lead and coordinator roles. Not because they write better ChatGPT prompts, but because they can convince colleagues to stop fearing change and find real use cases instead of daydreaming. A young developer can quickly master a new tool. But an employee with 20 years of experience knows that 90% of cool AI ideas never make it to production — and knows why.
What This Means
AI could flip the labor market not in favor of youth, as many assumed, but in favor of experience. At least for the next 2-3 years while companies figure out how all this works.