The next competitive edge in business? A new skill partnership between humans, agents, and robots
Major new technologies have always changed how people work—and artificial intelligence may be the most powerful yet. Many worry this means mass job losses. Our research suggests something more nuanced—and ultimately more hopeful. AI, in its current form, works best in collaboration with people, not in place of them. Making that collaboration succeed—and ensuring people thrive—will require rethinking how organizations develop and use skills, from frontline employees to top executives.
New McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) research finds that AI-powered agents and robots available today are technically capable of performing tasks that occupy about half of current U.S. work hours. It’s a striking but easily misunderstood number. This doesn’t mean half of all jobs will vanish—it means many of today’s work activities could be automated, freeing people to take on different parts of the same work and creating new jobs. How quickly these changes occur depends on business choices about technology adoption. If the history of other technological transformations is any guide, full adoption could take decades.
Still, the potential is enormous. We estimate that pairing people and AI tools, including agents and robots, could unlock almost $3 trillion in economic value in the United States by 2030. Realizing these gains will require reimagining work itself—rethinking processes, roles, and culture so that people and intelligent machines can work together to become far more productive.
Success will also require new skills—not just the technical capabilities to build and govern AI, but also the human and analytical abilities needed to collaborate effectively with these tools. In the past two years, job postings show a sevenfold increase in demand for AI fluency—the ability to use and manage AI. Roles as diverse as SEO specialists, organic chemists, financial reporting managers, and engineers are increasingly requiring the skill—an early sign of broader changes to come.
In the near term, skills such as conflict resolution and design thinking will remain valuable much as they are today because they rely on creativity, contextual understanding, and empathy—qualities that machines cannot yet replicate at a high level. Others, like accounting or claims adjusting, may be better handled by AI. Still others, such as research, data analysis, and project management, could be performed by either people or machines, depending on the context.
MGI’s analysis finds that about 72% of today’s skills can be applied in work that both people and automation can perform. In other words, most existing skills will remain relevant, though people will use them differently as machines take on some of the tasks those skills once supported. This includes many foundational skills—such as communication, management, operations, problem-solving, leadership, attention to detail, customer relations, and writing—which will endure but evolve as people and AI work together.
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