AI Roundtable Open Debate · 4 models
What are the best jobs on the market right now.
Answer: AI, healthcare, renewable energy, and skilled trades are the best career paths for growth and stability. (All 4 models agreed)
Counterpoint: Grok 4.3 and GPT-5.5 maintained that the explosive growth and salary premiums in tech and AI still outweigh the benefits of skilled trades.
Model Responses
GPT-5.5
Answer: Technology, healthcare, and renewable energy sectors currently offer the best jobs due to high demand, strong salaries, and long-term growth.
The other models' responses align closely with my initial stance and add useful detail without requiring a change in the core sectors identified. Grok and Gemini both emphasize AI within technology alongside healthcare and renewables, reinforcing the high-demand areas I noted. Claude's inclusion of cybersecurity and skilled trades fits under the broader technology and growth-oriented fields, while his data on salaries and BLS projections supports the same economic drivers. These contributions confirm the structural advantages of these sectors without shifting the headline focus.
Grok 4.3
Answer: The best jobs on the market right now remain in AI, healthcare, and renewable energy fields due to strong demand and competitive compensation.
The other responses largely reinforce the same core sectors I identified initially, with only minor expansions into adjacent areas like cybersecurity, which is already encompassed under AI and technology. Claude's inclusion of skilled trades such as electricians adds an interesting angle on automation resistance, but it does not outweigh the explosive growth and salary premiums in the original three fields backed by consistent data from multiple sources. Overall, the consensus across models confirms that technological advancement, demographic shifts, and sustainability policies continue to drive these areas as the strongest opportunities.
Gemini 3.5 Flash (changed mind)
Answer: The best jobs on the market right now are in artificial intelligence, healthcare, cybersecurity, renewable energy, and skilled trades, offering a mix of high compensation, rapid growth, and strong defense against automation.
In this round, I am updating my position to incorporate the highly compelling point raised by Claude Opus 4.7 regarding skilled trades. While technology, healthcare, and green energy remain the primary engines of modern career growth, the inclusion of skilled trades—particularly electricians, HVAC technicians, and plumbers—creates a more complete and realistic picture of today's optimal labor market. The argument for skilled trades is undeniable. These roles are experiencing severe talent shortages due to an aging workforce, cannot be offshored, and are highly resistant to AI automation. Furthermore, the global push toward electrification, renewable energy integration, and infrastructure modernization directly increases the demand for specialized electricians, offering excellent compensation and entrepreneurial opportunities without requiring a traditional four-year degree. This addition perfectly complements my existing focus on AI/ML engineering, cybersecurity, healthcare (such as nurse practitioners), and renewable energy. Together, these fields represent the absolute best opportunities on the market, balancing high-growth technological upside with irreplaceable, hands-on essential services.
Claude Opus 4.7
Answer: The best jobs on the market right now are in AI/ML engineering, healthcare practitioners (nurse practitioners, PAs), cybersecurity, skilled trades, and renewable energy — combining strong pay, high demand, and durable long-term growth.
I'm maintaining my position because the other models broadly converge on the same core sectors (AI, healthcare, renewable energy, cybersecurity), which reinforces rather than challenges my framework. None offered a contrarian insight or data point that would shift my analysis. Where my answer remains stronger and worth keeping: the inclusion of **skilled trades**. Grok 4.3, GPT-5.5, and Gemini 3.5 Flash all overlooked electricians, plumbers, and HVAC technicians — a significant blind spot given that these roles offer $70K–$120K+ wages, are immune to offshoring and largely resistant to automation, and face a demographic cliff as Baby Boomer tradespeople retire. The electrification of buildings, grid upgrades, and EV infrastructure buildout make electricians arguably one of the most underrated 'best jobs' on the market today. Ignoring trades reflects a common white-collar bias in these analyses. I also stand by the specificity of citing concrete BLS projections (e.g., ~45% growth for nurse practitioners, wind turbine techs and solar installers as the fastest-growing occupations by percentage) rather than speaking in generalities. The other responses are directionally correct but less actionable. One minor concession: Gemini's mention of 'health services managers' is a fair addition I'd happily fold in, but it doesn't change the top-tier list.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a strong consensus on the dominance of AI, healthcare, and green energy, citing high demand and demographic shifts. Claude Opus 4.7 successfully persuaded Gemini 3.5 Flash to include skilled trades, arguing that electricians and HVAC technicians are uniquely protected from automation and offshoring. While GPT-5.5 and Grok 4.3 remained focused on the massive salary premiums of high-tech roles, the group collectively favored jobs where demand structurally outpaces supply.
All 4 models agreed