Könyv HARDER TO AUTOMATE Walson Liu

HARDER TO AUTOMATE

A Career Method for Proving Your Value When AI Can Do the Rest

Szerző: Walson Liu
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 12. 07. 2026
3 941 Ft
You don't have a job-security problem. You have a task-exposure problem - and that's something you c...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
176
EAN
9798186213758
Enbook ID
53207288
Súly
222
Méretek
152 x 229 x 11

Teljes leírás

You don't have a job-security problem. You have a task-exposure problem - and that's something you can actually fix.

By 2030, the World Economic Forum projects that roughly six in ten workers will need retraining, and a large share of the skills your job demands today will have changed by then. AI is one current in that river, not the whole river. The question was never whether your work would shift. It's whether you'll be ready when it does.

Harder to Automate hands you a method, not a pep talk. By the end of the first chapter, you'll have done something most of your colleagues never will: looked at your own work honestly enough to know exactly where you stand, and what to do about it. Not your job title, but the actual tasks you do all day, sorted into the ones AI can take and the ones it can't.

Inside, you'll learn how to audit your real work task by task, instead of guessing from your job title. You'll build the four human capabilities that grow more valuable as the tools around you improve. You'll map your true skill gaps and close them on a focused ninety-day plan. Then you'll install a system that keeps you adapting for years, not just this quarter - and learn to prove your value so the people who decide your future can actually see it.

Whether you're thirty-five and watching your industry change, or fifty-five and refusing to be written off, this is a clear, practical guide for the age of AI: a way to make your work harder to automate, and your value easier to prove.

For readers of career and future-of-work books who want a plan they can act on this week, not just another warning about robots.