Most BBQ conversations about the future of AI end up as a discussion about jobs being replaced, new jobs created the balance between the two, and the pain of those being replaced by machine.
It is difficult to forecast what those new jobs will be, we have not seen them before, the circumstances by which they will be created are still evolving.
18 months ago, a new job emerged that now appears to be everywhere.
‘Prompt engineer’.
Yesterday it seems, there was no such thing as a ‘prompt engineer’. Nobody envisaged such a job, nobody considered the capabilities or training necessary to become an effective prompt engineer. Now, if you put the term into a search engine there are millions of responses, thousands of websites, guides, and courses have popped up from nowhere. They promise riches for those who are skilled ‘prompt engineers’ and training for those who hop onto the gravy train.
What is the skill set required to be a prompt engineer?
There are no traditional education courses available, do you need to be an engineer, a copywriter, marketer, mathematician?
This uncertainty makes recruiting extremely difficult. The usual guardrails of qualifications and past experience necessary to fill a role are useless.
How do you know if the 20-year-old with no life experience and limited formal education might be an effective and productive prompt engineer?
How many job descriptions will emerge over the next couple of years that are currently not even under any sort of consideration?
Recruiting rules no longer play a role. We need to hire for curiosity, intellectual agility, and some form of conceptual capability that I have no word for.
The challenging task faced by businesses is how they adjust the mix of capabilities to accommodate this new reality.
Do they proactively seek to build the skills of existing employees which requires investment? Do they clean house and start again, losing corporate memory and costing a fortune? Do they try and find some middle path?
Where and how do you find the personnel capable of building for a future that is undefined?