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http://zeally.net/nghe-nghiep-nao-se-khong-bi-dao-thai-trong-20-nam-toi/

What If people who buy the product have a more complex question for the telemarketer?
In 2013, a highly cited study by Oxford University academics called The Future of
Employment examined 702 common occupations and found that some jobs –
telemarketers, tax preparers and sports referees – are at more risk than others
including recreational psychologists, dentists and physicians.
Automation is “blind to the color of your collar.” It doesn’t matter whether you’re
a factory worker, a financial advisor or a professional flute-player: automation is
coming for you.

Which professions are at greatest risk?


automation isn’t synonymous with job losses
the jobs themselves won’t entirely vanish; rather, they will be redefined
From the perspective of the worker there is not much of a difference” between
work disappearing and being redefined.
“So a lawyer today doesn’t develop systems that offer advice, but the lawyer of
2025 will. They’ll still be called lawyers but they’ll be doing different things.”
the jobs that are most at risk are those which “are on some level routine,
repetitive and predictable”.
Telemarketing, for example, which is highly routine, has a 99% probability of
automation according to The Future of Employment report; you may have
already noticed an increase in irritating robocalls.
Fast food cooks also face an 81% probability of having their jobs replaced by
robots (flipping burgers in Caliburger)

What jobs will be safe from robots?


The first is jobs that involve “genuine creativity, such as being an artist, being a
scientist, developing a new business strategy.
The second area is occupations that involve building complex relationships with
people: nurses, for example, or a business role that requires you to build close
relationships with clients.
The third area is jobs that are highly unpredictable – for example, if you’re a
plumber who is called out to emergencies in different locations.
You can see these parameters at play in the jobs The Future of
Employment identifies as least at risk of automation, which include recreational
therapists, first-line supervisors of mechanics, installers, repairers, occupational
therapists and healthcare social workers.
2020s are going to be a decade not of unemployment, but of redeployment. We
make assumptions about the essence of human beings, but machines are doing
things we thought only humans might be able to: compose music, beat
professional players at complex board games.
Others factors
- Climate change
- The rise of the middle class in many emerging markets
- Aging populations
- Make gender inequality even worse because boys in science, technology,
engineering -> jobs grow. Women in care-related professions such as
healthcare, education are at lower risk of automation
How can we prepare?
- It’s better to diversity your portfolio
- Becoming more flexible
- Likely to have several jobs at the same time

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