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Tuesday, February 24, 2026

How to remain AI-proof in a rapidly changing world

AI is causing tension across boardrooms and campuses alike. Every week brings another announcement, a model that writes code, a system that diagnoses disease, a tool that drafts reports in seconds. At the India AI Impact Summit 2026, the mood reflected this duality. On one hand, there was confidence in AI’s ability to accelerate growth; on the other, unease about what it may displace. From OpenAI’s Sam Altman to Google’s Sundar Pichai, the message was consistent: disruption is inevitable, but irrelevance is not.

The question is no longer whether AI will change your work. It is whether you will change with it.

REPOSITION, DON’T RESIST: WHY MINDSET IS THE FIRST DEFENCE AGAINST AI

There is a tendency, in moments like these, to frame technology as an adversary. History suggests otherwise. When machines entered factories, they did not eliminate human labour; they redefined it. AI is following the same path.

It is removing repetition, not responsibility. The professionals who endure will not be those who resist AI, but those who reposition themselves alongside it.

One useful way to understand this shift is through what many leadership thinkers call the Modify, Amplify, Dominate approach.

The first step is to modify your mindset. Elon Musk has repeatedly argued that AI will be “the most disruptive force in history”, yet he has also invested deeply in it, from autonomous driving to neural interfaces.

His logic is simple: proximity reduces vulnerability. To remain relevant, one must understand the tools shaping the future. This does not require becoming a machine-learning engineer overnight. It means learning how AI intersects with your current work.

A journalist can use it to analyse data. A lawyer can use it to review documents faster. A teacher can use it to personalise learning. The goal is not replacement, but reinforcement.

Bill Gates has framed it in similar terms. He believes AI will handle routine cognitive work, freeing humans to focus on “tasks that require judgment, empathy and creativity”. That shift places a premium on human depth. Which brings us to the second principle: amplify what machines cannot do.

UNDERSTANDING WHAT MACHINES CAN’T DO

AI can generate answers, but it cannot carry moral responsibility. It can detect patterns, but it cannot inspire conviction. Leadership, trust, negotiation and ethical reasoning remain human territories.

Sundar Pichai has often emphasised that the most valuable professionals in the AI era will be those who combine technical awareness with social intelligence. In practice, this means investing in skills that deepen human influence — communication, strategic thinking, mentorship, and decision-making under uncertainty.

This is already visible inside organisations. Managers who use AI to gather insights still rely on human instinct to act on them.

Entrepreneurs who use AI to build products still depend on human judgment to identify problems worth solving. In other words, AI expands capability, but humans still define direction.

The final principle is to dominate with a hybrid identity. The future belongs neither to narrow specialists nor to shallow generalists, but to those who can bridge both.

Sam Altman has warned that entire categories of work may disappear, but he has also pointed out that new categories will emerge just as quickly. The advantage will lie with those who can adapt across domains.

This requires deliberate effort. Data literacy is becoming as essential as basic computer literacy once was. Understanding how AI systems work, their strengths, their limits, their biases, is fast becoming a professional necessity.

So too is the discipline of lifelong learning. In a world where tools evolve monthly, static expertise fades quickly.

Yet there is reassurance in this uncertainty. AI thrives on existing information. Humans thrive on interpretation. Machines can generate options, but they do not bear consequences. That responsibility still belongs to people.

This is why the most enduring advice remains the simplest: do not compete with AI at being mechanical. Compete at being human.

The professionals who remain AI-proof will not be those who avoid the technology, nor those who rely on it blindly. They will be those who understand it, use it, and then go beyond it, bringing judgment, imagination and accountability to places machines cannot reach.

AI is not removing the need for human work. It is raising the standard of what human work must become.

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