Corporate Life

AI hit software engineers first. Here's what they want you to know.




Since late last year, AI-powered tools like Claude Code and GitHub Copilot have fundamentally reshaped how software engineers work. For some, this new era represents unprecedented productivity gains; for others, it has triggered a quiet crisis of professional identity as they navigate an evolving landscape.

The implications extend far beyond tech. Last week on X, Greg Brockman, OpenAI's cofounder and president, observed that AI has dramatically accelerated software development—and is "on track to bring this same transformation to every other kind of work that people do with a computer."

"More and more, people can turn intent into software, spreadsheets, presentations, workflows, science, and companies," Brockman wrote.

Business Insider spoke with engineers at the forefront of this shift to uncover lessons for white-collar professionals across industries.

 Specialization Is No Longer a Safe Harbor

AI disruption may unexpectedly favor generalists.

Andrew Hsu, cofounder and CTO of AI language-learning startup Speak, notes that software startups have traditionally operated with three distinct functions: engineering, product, and design. Today, AI is dissolving those boundaries.

Product managers and designers now use tools like Claude Code to write production-ready code and submit pull requests. Meanwhile, engineers are increasingly contributing to product strategy and user experience decisions.

Hsu sees this as a preview of broader workplace evolution. The professionals who will thrive, he argues, are those willing to "specialize less."

"Specialization, in many ways, becomes less important with these omniscient models, where you can learn everything very quickly," Hsu said. Instead, workers have an opportunity to "move up the ladder of abstraction" and take greater ownership over outcomes—not just tasks.

Double Down on What Makes You Human

OpenAI recently published a report mapping AI's near-term impact across more than 900 occupations—covering 99.7% of U.S. employment. The findings: 18% of jobs face relatively higher short-term automation risk. Three traits commonly define these vulnerable roles:
- High exposure to AI capabilities
- Low requirement for human judgment or interaction
- Limited or uncertain demand growth to offset potential displacement

Software engineer Maahir Sharma sees this pattern emerging in real time. He predicts AI tools could soon handle scheduling, stakeholder coordination, and administrative logistics—functions traditionally managed by executive assistants.

Feneel Doshi, a startup engineer, agrees: roles centered on repetitive, computer-based tasks—like help desk support or data entry—are especially susceptible. His advice? Don't resist AI; learn to leverage it. "The workers who adapt fastest will have the biggest advantage," he said.

 Disruption ≠ Job Loss

Rapid change is stressful—but it doesn't automatically mean fewer opportunities.

Despite profound shifts in required skills and reduced entry-level hiring, demand for software engineers hasn't collapsed. According to TrueUp, a tech hiring analytics firm, software engineering job postings recently hit a three-year high, with over 67,000 open roles.

Amit Bendov, CEO of Gong—an AI platform for revenue teams—argues that AI's impact depends less on the technology itself and more on underlying market demand.

In industries with stagnant demand, like traditional travel services, AI is more likely to replace roles. (Consider the decades-long decline of travel agents.) But in fields where AI unlocks new possibilities, it can expand the total addressable work.

"AI hasn't just automated coding—it's expanded what's possible," Bendov said. "That creates more work, not less."

He draws a parallel to sales: if AI reduces guesswork and boosts effectiveness, more companies may afford to build or scale sales teams—and more individuals may succeed in those roles.

"In that scenario," Bendov added, "you could actually see more jobs created."

The Takeaway for Knowledge Workers

The software engineering experience offers three actionable insights for white-collar professionals:

1. **Embrace breadth over depth.** As AI handles more specialized execution, strategic thinking, cross-functional collaboration, and contextual judgment become differentiators.
2. **Amplify your human edge.** Creativity, empathy, negotiation, and ethical reasoning remain difficult to automate—and increasingly valuable.
3. **View AI as a multiplier, not a replacement.** The goal isn't to compete with AI, but to harness it to extend your impact.

As Brockman put it, the ability to turn intent into output is becoming democratized. The question isn't whether your job will change—it's whether you'll lead that change, or be led by it.

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