Learning Objectives
- Evaluate your own role's AI exposure using a structured framework
- Categorize your daily tasks by automation risk
- Identify your strongest position for the AI transition
Why Generic Advice Does Not Help
You have seen the lists: "Top 10 jobs AI will replace." They are mostly clickbait. Whether AI affects your career depends on what you actually do every day, not your job title.
Two people with the title "Marketing Manager" might have completely different AI exposure. One spends most of their time writing ad copy (highly automatable). The other spends most of their time building client relationships and negotiating contracts (very hard to automate). Same title, very different situations.
This lesson gives you a framework to assess your specific situation.
✅Tip
Grab a pen. This lesson works best if you write down your answers as you go. Spend 5 minutes on the task inventory before moving to the scoring section. The action plan in a later lesson builds directly on what you discover here.
Step 1: Map Your Daily Tasks
List the 8 to 12 tasks that make up a typical work week. Be specific — not "manage projects" but "update project timelines in Monday.com" or "run weekly team standup." Include everything: the important work, the mundane work, and the work you wish you could skip.
Here is an example for a mid-level HR professional:
| Task | Hours/Week |
|---|---|
| Screen resumes and schedule interviews | 4 |
| Conduct interviews | 3 |
| Write job descriptions | 2 |
| Process payroll and benefits questions | 3 |
| Mediate employee conflicts | 2 |
| Run onboarding sessions | 2 |
| Update HR policies and documentation | 2 |
| Strategic workforce planning meetings | 2 |
Step 2: Score Each Task
For each task, assign an AI impact score from 1 to 5:
| Score | Meaning | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| 1 — Minimal | AI has little impact on this task | Physical repairs, in-person care, crisis management |
| 2 — Assistive | AI can help but you still do most of the work | Negotiation prep, strategic planning, mentoring |
| 3 — Collaborative | AI does significant portions; you guide and refine | Report writing, data analysis, research |
| 4 — Automatable | AI can do most of this; you review and approve | Email drafting, scheduling, form processing |
| 5 — Replaceable | AI can fully handle this with minimal oversight | Data entry, basic translations, template generation |
⚠️Warning
Be honest, not defensive. If a task you enjoy is highly automatable, that is not a personal failing — it is information you can use. The goal is clarity, not comfort.
Continuing our HR example:
| Task | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Screen resumes | 5 | AI screening tools already do this well |
| Conduct interviews | 2 | Requires human judgment, rapport, reading body language |
| Write job descriptions | 4 | AI can draft these; you customize and approve |
| Process payroll/benefits questions | 4 | Chatbots handle most routine HR inquiries |
| Mediate employee conflicts | 1 | Deeply human — empathy, organizational politics, trust |
| Run onboarding sessions | 3 | AI can create materials; delivery still benefits from human presence |
| Update HR policies | 3 | AI can draft; you ensure compliance and organizational fit |
| Strategic workforce planning | 2 | AI can provide data; decisions require organizational judgment |
Step 3: Calculate Your AI Exposure Profile
Add up your scores and divide by the number of tasks. This gives you a rough AI Exposure Index:
- 1.0 to 2.0 — Low exposure. Your role is primarily human-centered. Focus on enhancing your work with AI tools, not defending against replacement.
- 2.1 to 3.0 — Moderate exposure. AI will change how you work significantly. The biggest opportunity is using AI to do more, faster, with higher quality.
- 3.1 to 4.0 — High exposure. Significant parts of your role are automatable. You need to actively shift toward higher-value tasks.
- 4.1 to 5.0 — Very high exposure. Your current task mix is heavily automatable. Career evolution is not optional — it is urgent.
Our HR example scores 3.0 (24 points / 8 tasks) — moderate exposure with clear areas to evolve.
💡Key Concept
Exposure is not destiny. A high score means your current task mix is automatable — it does not mean your career is over. It means you need to deliberately shift toward tasks that score 1 or 2. That is exactly what the rest of this playbook helps you do.
Step 4: Identify Your Shift Strategy
Look at your task inventory and identify:
Tasks to automate (scores 4-5): These are tasks where AI can save you hours per week. Instead of resisting automation, embrace it — and reinvest that time in higher-value work.
Tasks to augment (scores 2-3): These are tasks where AI makes you better. Use AI for the routine parts (drafting, researching, analyzing) while you provide the judgment, creativity, and human connection.
Tasks to protect and grow (scores 1-2): These are your moat. The tasks AI cannot do are where your career future lives. Invest in getting better at these.
What Your Assessment Tells You
If most of your week is spent on scores 4-5, you are in a vulnerable position — but you are also in the best position to see immediate gains from AI tools. Automating those tasks frees you to do more of the work that matters.
If most of your week is scores 1-2, you are in a strong position — but do not be complacent. Learn to use AI for the parts of your job that score 3 or higher, and you will become dramatically more productive.
The sweet spot is a task mix that is heavy on 1-2 scores and uses AI aggressively for everything else. That is the AI-augmented professional — and that is our next lesson.
Key Takeaways
- Your job title does not determine your AI exposure — your daily tasks do
- Map your actual tasks, score them honestly, and calculate your exposure index
- Every score level has a strategy: automate (4-5), augment (2-3), protect and grow (1-2)
- High exposure is not a death sentence — it is a signal to shift your task mix
- The time you save by automating routine tasks is your biggest career opportunity