Image

20 jobs and careers AI is unlikely to ever contact, based on Microsoft

  • Microsoft has listed the jobs least likely to be impacted by artificial intelligence. Healthcare and blue collar jobs are the safest, while those in the communication field are most at risk.

For all the doomsaying about the effect of artificial intelligence on the job market, there are some positions that are, for now at least, relatively safe.

While people in the communications field have good reason to be worried, Microsoft has unveiled a study showing which careers are most and least likely to be affected by generative AI. What it avoided saying directly, though, was whether those careers would vanish in the coming years.

To determine the risk factor, Microsoft analyzed a “dataset of 200k anonymized and privacy-scrubbed conversations between users and Microsoft Bing Copilot” to assess an AI applicability score. The higher the score, the bigger the threat. The jobs most at risk, it found, were those that involve “providing information and assistance, writing, teaching, and advising.”

The study’s not the first to send up a warning flare about those positions, though. What it did that really stood out was look at the jobs that area less likely to be impacted. And healthcare and blue-collar jobs have the best chance of withstanding an AI assault.

Here’s a ranked look at the 20 careers that posted the lowest AI applicability score:

  • Dredge operators
  • Bridge and lock tenders
  • Water treatment plant and system operators
  • Foundry mold and coremakers
  • Rail-track laying and maintenance equipment operators
  • Pile driver operators
  • Floor sanders and finishers
  • Orderlies
  • Motorboat operators
  • Logging equipment operators
  • Paving, surfacing, and tamping equipment operators
  • Maids and housekeeping cleaners
  • Roustabouts (oil and gas)
  • Roofers
  • Gas compressor and gas pumping station operators
  • Helpers–roofers
  • Tire builders
  • Surgical assistants
  • Massage therapists
  • Ophthalmic medical technicians

Other jobs that are in the safety zone include industrial truck and tractor operators, highway maintenance workers, dishwashers, automotive glass installers, embalmers and phlebotomists.

Introducing the 2025 Fortune 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in America. Explore this year’s list.

SHARE THIS POST