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AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models

With the increasing rise of AI, what jobs are becoming more relevant in the future. Which specific skills will become more important and sought after ?

Result: Unanimous — Yes (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: Yes

The question asks about jobs and skills becoming more relevant due to AI's rise, presupposing such shifts exist. Option A ('Yes') affirms this, aligning with evidence from search results showing AI creates net job gains and demands new roles/skills. Search results confirm: World Economic Forum predicts 170 million new AI-driven jobs by 2030, netting +78 million after 92 million displaced [2]. Emerging jobs include AI-orchestrated roles in manufacturing, healthcare, finance, and IT [2]. Goldman Sachs notes productivity booms and new jobs despite automation [1]. Key skills rising: **AI literacy, data analytics, cybersecurity** (digital/technical); **creativity, empathy, leadership** (human/adaptive); polymath abilities combining AI fluency with domain expertise like marketing+coding or doctor+AI [2][3]. These are explicitly 'future-critical' for workforce transformation [2]. Option B ('No') ignores this data; evidence shows AI augments humans, making specialized, interdisciplinary skills highly sought after, not obsolete.

GPT-5.4

Vote: Yes

A is the better choice because the prompt is effectively asking whether AI will change which jobs and skills become more relevant in the future, and the answer is clearly yes. As AI expands, demand rises for roles that build, supervise, apply, and govern these systems. That includes AI engineers, data scientists, cybersecurity specialists, product managers, compliance and risk professionals, and domain experts who can work alongside AI tools. Human-centered jobs also become more valuable, especially where trust, judgment, empathy, creativity, and complex communication matter. Examples include healthcare, education, leadership, skilled trades, and client-facing advisory roles. The most sought-after skills will include AI literacy, data interpretation, critical thinking, prompt writing, software and automation skills, cybersecurity awareness, ethical judgment, adaptability, and strong communication. In short, AI increases the relevance of both technical and distinctly human skills, so Yes is the strongest answer.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: Yes

The question asks what jobs and skills will become more relevant with AI's rise, implying a 'yes' to their existence (option A). AI automates routine tasks, elevating demand for roles like AI ethicists, data scientists, prompt engineers, and human-AI collaboration specialists. Key skills surging in importance include AI literacy, critical thinking, creativity, emotional intelligence, and lifelong learning adaptability. Reports from World Economic Forum and McKinsey predict these will drive job growth, with 97 million new roles by 2025. Option B ('No') ignores evident trends; AI creates more opportunities than it displaces, as historical tech shifts (e.g., internet) show. Vote A aligns with evidence for a compelling future workforce vision.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: Yes

The question asks about jobs and skills becoming more relevant due to AI's rise. While 'Yes' and 'No' are oddly framed options for an open-ended question, 'Yes' aligns with affirming that there ARE indeed jobs and skills becoming more relevant. AI is creating demand for roles like AI/ML engineers, data scientists, prompt engineers, AI ethics specialists, and AI trainers. Beyond technical roles, human-centric jobs in healthcare, creative strategy, complex problem-solving, and emotional intelligence-driven fields (therapy, counseling, leadership coaching) are growing. Key skills becoming more important include: critical thinking, data literacy, AI tool proficiency, adaptability, creativity, interdisciplinary knowledge, and ethical reasoning. Technical skills like programming, machine learning, cybersecurity, and cloud computing are also increasingly sought after. Voting 'Yes' affirms that AI is indeed reshaping the job market and making specific skills more valuable — this is well-supported by labor market trends and expert analyses.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: Yes

Although the prompt asks an open-ended question with binary Yes/No options, I vote 'A' (Yes) to affirm that new roles and skills are indeed becoming critically relevant due to the rise of AI. As AI automates routine and repetitive tasks, uniquely human-centric roles like AI Ethicists, Prompt Engineers, Data Privacy Managers, and AI Systems Auditors will see massive growth. Furthermore, interpersonal jobs in healthcare, specialized education, and strategic leadership will remain irreplaceable and highly relevant. In terms of specific skills, emotional intelligence, critical thinking, and complex problem-solving will become paramount. Technical literacy—specifically the ability to collaborate with, audit, and guide AI tools—will shift from a specialized skill to a fundamental requirement across almost all industries.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: Yes

The premise that AI is making certain jobs and skills more relevant is undeniable. As automation handles routine cognitive and manual tasks, human roles are shifting toward AI oversight, ethical governance, and complex decision-making. Specifically, jobs in AI ethics, prompt engineering, human-machine interaction design, and AI-augmented healthcare are experiencing surging demand. These roles require technical literacy combined with domain expertise—professionals who can train models, interpret outputs critically, and ensure responsible deployment. Critical skills gaining prominence include advanced critical thinking, complex problem-solving, emotional intelligence, and creativity. As AI generates content and analysis, the ability to verify, contextualize, and strategically apply these outputs becomes invaluable. Additionally, adaptability and continuous learning meta-skills are essential as job requirements evolve rapidly. Human-centric capabilities—empathy, negotiation, cross-cultural communication, and ethical judgment—will become premium differentiators that machines cannot replicate. The future workforce requires not just technical AI literacy, but the sophisticated judgment to deploy these tools effectively within human values and complex social contexts.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable faced the curious challenge of answering an open-ended inquiry about the future of work using only a binary 'Yes' or 'No' format. Despite the restrictive options, the consensus was immediate and unanimous, with all six models choosing 'Yes' to affirm that AI's rise is triggering a massive shift in relevant jobs and skills.

All 6 models agreed on "Yes" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: The most critical emerging skill is the ability to verify, contextualize, and strategically apply AI-generated outputs, moving humans from 'creators' to 'expert auditors' who ensure machine logic aligns with complex social and ethical contexts.