Get Hired

 Goodbye, Grunt Work: How AI Is Reshaping Entry-Level Careers




When Ume Habiba joined Microsoft as a junior software engineer last year, she braced herself for the classic new-hire routine: fixing minor bugs, documenting code, and handling the tedious tasks senior developers prefer to delegate.

Instead, the 24-year-old University of Maryland graduate was handed ownership of a new feature for Azure Networking—one of Microsoft's core cloud products.

Her miscalculation? Underestimating how AI tools like GitHub Copilot would absorb the routine coding chores that have traditionally served as on-the-job training for early-career engineers.

"It was crazy," Habiba said. "I totally was not expecting to do a feature right off the bat."

Habiba's experience reflects a broader shift: AI is automating the foundational, repetitive work that once defined entry-level roles across white-collar industries. In its place, companies are entrusting junior hires with higher-stakes projects sooner—a change that could make starter jobs more engaging but also more demanding.

"AI is changing the entry-level experience for an entire generation of white-collar workers," said Peter Cappelli, management professor and director of the Center for Human Resources at Wharton. "Companies really need to think through how to support these new hires."

 Fewer Entry-Level Roles, Higher Expectations

AI isn't just changing *what* entry-level employees do—it may be reducing *how many* roles companies need.

In 2025, Indeed saw a 7% year-over-year decline in job postings for junior positions, while listings for senior roles increased by 4%. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for recent college graduates hovered at 5.7% in Q1 2026, compared to 4.2% for the overall workforce, per the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Laura Ullrich, director of economic research at Indeed, attributes this gap to economic uncertainty, AI's growing automation capabilities, and the significant investment companies are making in AI infrastructure itself.

Former Cisco CEO John Chambers, now leading venture firm JC2 Ventures, expects AI to temporarily suppress entry-level hiring before spawning entirely new job categories. He compares the AI revolution to the internet boom—but warns its impact will unfold faster and cut deeper across industries.

"I'm the optimist on how this turns out," Chambers said. "But there will be a lag."

 Productivity Gains—and New Responsibilities

For graduates who do land entry-level roles, AI is accelerating their impact.

At Okta, junior auditors once spent hours manually cross-checking compliance documents. Now, an AI assistant scans those documents against "gold standard" benchmarks and flags discrepancies in real time. This frees junior staff to focus on higher-value analysis: Why is something non-compliant? How can the process improve?

"We're leveraging AI to really automate some of the simpler tasks and the more mundane elements of work," said Rebecca Port, Okta's chief people officer.

Similarly, Microsoft's junior sales representatives now use AI tools to rehearse pitches before client meetings—reducing reliance on senior colleagues for role-play practice.

 The Learning Curve Dilemma

Despite efficiency gains, experts caution that stripping away foundational tasks could undermine long-term development.

Chambers emphasizes that repetitive work builds intuition: it teaches newcomers how systems function, where errors hide, and how to troubleshoot under pressure.

"AI cannot replace experience," he said.

Jennifer Tosti-Kharas, professor of organizational behavior at Babson College, adds that workplace maturity—navigating ambiguity, managing stakeholder expectations, reading office dynamics—still takes years to cultivate.

"We have to remember it's still their first job," she said. "AI doesn't make them more mature."

There's also the risk of generational friction. When junior employees skip the "paying dues" phase, older colleagues may perceive them as untested—a dynamic that could fuel resentment.

"This feels like a grand experiment," Tosti-Kharas observed.

 Rethinking Training for the AI Era


Forward-thinking employers are adapting their development strategies accordingly.

EY and KPMG are piloting AI-enhanced training programs: EY is deploying simulated audit scenarios with embedded learning tools, while KPMG is testing AI-driven simulations to teach tax preparation fundamentals as automation handles routine tasks.

Even with AI support, stepping into complex work early can be daunting.

Habiba credited Copilot with helping her write code, generate tests, and streamline development—but when tackling network architecture and performance optimization, imposter syndrome crept in.

She ultimately succeeded by leaning on mentorship. Microsoft now intentionally structures "multi-generational teams" that pair junior and senior staff, said Katy George, the company's corporate vice president of workforce transformation.

That collaboration reinforced a key lesson for Habiba: technical skill alone no longer defines value.

"Anyone can code now," she said. "What else do you bring to the table?"

In an AI-augmented workplace, the answer increasingly lies in communication, critical thinking, and the human judgment that algorithms can't replicate.
**Lessons from a Very Messy Career That Produced Wonderful Surprises**

**Four Things I Learned About Managing People**

Teaching undergraduates is a humbling experience. Many arrive with their futures neatly mapped out: a coveted analyst role at a top bank or consulting firm, followed by graduate school, a series of impressive positions, family, travel, and eventually a board seat or two.

Life, of course, is far messier. As management scholar Henry Mintzberg famously observed, we tend to imagine management as a conductor flawlessly leading an orchestra. In reality, it’s more like conducting during a chaotic rehearsal—when everything is going wrong. The truth is, you don’t *want* everything to go exactly according to plan. The off-key notes and unexpected detours often teach you the most and lead to your greatest opportunities.

Here are four hard-earned lessons from my own wonderfully messy career.
1. Incentives Rarely Work as Intended

We’ve all heard the saying: “Change the incentives, and you change the behavior.” There’s some truth to it. Programs like Mexico’s Prospera, which offer cash incentives for school attendance and preventative healthcare, have delivered impressive results.

Yet study after study shows that incentives often fail—and can even backfire. Human behavior is too complex to be reduced to simple triggers. Deep-seated norms, social expectations, and unintended consequences frequently distort outcomes.

As economists Roland Bénabou and Jean Tirole demonstrated in their influential paper, people are driven by more than extrinsic rewards. **Intrinsic motivation** and **reputational concerns** often matter far more. Artists, for instance, will endure years of financial struggle for the satisfaction of creation and the respect of their peers.

Worse, extrinsic rewards can actually *crowd out* intrinsic drive. In one classic experiment, participants paid for each puzzle solved were *less* likely to keep working in their free time than those paid a flat fee.

Great leadership isn’t about dangling carrots to prod people forward. It’s about attracting people who already share your goals and inspiring them through shared values and purpose.

2. You Don’t Need the Best People—You Need the Best Teams

In 1997, McKinsey sparked a frenzy with its “War for Talent” report, arguing that recruiting the best and brightest had become more important than strategy, capital, or R&D. That idea still shapes leadership thinking today.

I once worked at a company where every senior leadership meeting, regardless of the agenda, eventually circled back to the same complaint: *We need better people*. The executives constantly wished for smarter, more skilled, and more ambitious talent.

Each time, I thought the same thing: *You recruited them. You trained them. You manage them.* If there’s a talent problem, it starts with leadership, not the team.

As workplace expert David Burkus puts it, “Talent doesn’t make the team. The team makes the talent.” Research from MIT and Carnegie Mellon supports this: collective intelligence depends far more on group dynamics—trust, psychological safety, and social sensitivity—than on individual IQs or star power.

If you constantly feel you need “better people,” the solution is rarely more aggressive recruiting. It’s becoming a better leader and building a stronger culture that helps people reach their full potential.

3. Empower Your People to “Never Go Down Alone”

One of my earliest managers gave me advice I’ve never forgotten: “Never go down alone.”

He explained that if he—and others—knew what I was working on, I’d have cover when things went wrong. We’d face the issue together. But if I operated in isolation, I’d carry the full blame when problems inevitably surfaced.

This mindset flips the usual view of transparency. Most of us guard our privacy and see oversight as micromanagement. We prefer to present a polished version of ourselves. Yet when you treat communication as a *shield* rather than an intrusion, everything changes.

When I moved into senior leadership, I asked my team to prepare short “Never Go Down Alone” reports—brief updates that told me what I needed to know to support them. They were hesitant at first, but the practice soon cascaded through the organization.

Every Friday, dozens of short reports would come in. I’d review them over the weekend and address issues on Monday. The result was remarkable: problems were caught early, surprises were minimized, and people felt genuinely protected.

4. Everybody Brings Something to You—and Needs Something from You

Years ago, we had a capable manager named Ania running one of our publishing businesses. She was diligent, responsible, and well-liked. Yet we felt the unit needed more creative energy, so we brought in a rising star to replace her. Ania left gracefully.

Later, we learned she had become a highly successful interior decorator, celebrated for her creativity. The issue wasn’t that Ania lacked creative ability—it was that we had never put her in a role that played to her strengths.

This is a fundamental truth of management: Every person brings something valuable *to* you and needs something *from* you. Your job is to understand that equation. When you do, you unlock potential. When you don’t, both sides suffer.

The Real Work of Management

For all the talk of carrots and sticks, hiring “A players,” and holding people accountable, the essence of great management is simpler and more human: **Create the conditions for people to do their best work.**

It’s not about control or authority. It’s about building environments where trust, collaboration, and purpose thrive—where messy realities are embraced, and wonderful surprises can emerge.

Forget Recruiting: Why Your HR Team Needs to Master the Art of Seduction to Win Top Talent

"Job hugging" and the rise of AI mean hiring experts must take a radically different approach to attracting new workers.

“Job hugging” sounds cozy, doesn’t it? It evokes images of professionals so in love with their work that they embrace it like a childhood teddy bear.

The reality is far grimmer. Driven by economic anxiety and an AI-upended job market, workers are white-knuckling their current roles—even the toxic ones—rather than risking a jump into the unknown. For HR teams trying to source top-tier talent, this stagnation requires a total shift in strategy. It’s time to turn up the charm.

At a recent Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) event, Jim D’Amico, VP of talent acquisition at Calibre Collision, put it bluntly: recruiters need to stop focusing on mere attraction and "focus on seduction."

Beyond the Paycheck: Courting the Cautious Worker

Industry experts at the event agreed that traditional bait—such as a higher salary—is no longer enough to pry a worker from their current role. Against a backdrop of mass layoffs and daily headlines about AI replacing white-collar jobs, passive candidates need deep, meaningful reassurance. They need to be actively convinced that joining your company is a safe, smart, and superior move.

To achieve this, HR teams must pivot from transactional hiring to deep, personal relationship-building. Ironically, the key to unlocking this human touch lies in embracing technology.

"Stop screening applications right now. The machine can screen."

Jim D’Amico, VP of Talent Acquisition, Caliber Collision

By outsourcing the initial screening to AI, recruiters can free up valuable hours to shepherd top-tier candidates through the hiring pipeline. This allows HR professionals to address individual anxieties, overcome objections, and effectively convince candidates that your company is the only choice, rendering rival offers irrelevant. Upskilling HR teams on these AI tools has become a modern necessity.

The AI Paradox: A Return to the Human Touch

While critics note the irony of using AI to fix a job market that AI disrupted, a fascinating counter-trend is emerging. The automated revolution is triggering a paradoxical return to human intuition.

Data shows that leaders are stepping away from pure analytics and returning to their instincts:

  • The Zety Study: A survey of over 1,000 hiring managers revealed a resurgence in trusting "gut feelings" and a rise in sourcing talent organically outside digital spaces (such as casual networking in coffee shops).

  • The Korn Ferry Study: Research from the global consulting giant confirms that C-suite leaders, overwhelmed by data fatigue, are increasingly relying on their intuition to make critical hiring decisions.

What This Means for Your Business

Whether you are looking to retain your current workforce or attract new stars, the playbook has changed.

1. Audit Your Internal Culture

Savvy CEOs should proactively address the "job hugging" phenomenon within their own walls. Open up honest dialogues with your staff to ensure they are genuinely engaged—not just clinging to their roles out of fear. Addressing workplace anxieties now prevents a toxic, stagnant culture later.

2. Personalize the Candidate Experience

If you are hunting for experienced passive talent, expect to put in double the effort. High-value workers want to be treated as individuals with unique human needs, not just a resume in a database. Use AI to handle the administrative heavy lifting, but rely on human empathy, intuition, and connection to close the deal.