Here's something that might surprise you: a recent Workday survey spanning multiple countries found that 83% of workers think AI will actually make human skills MORE valuable, not obsolete.



Counterintuitive, right? But it makes sense when you think about it.

As automation handles routine tasks, what becomes scarce? The messy, unpredictable stuff only humans can do. Empathy. Creative problem-solving. Nuanced judgment calls.

There are five specific human-centric capabilities that'll likely outweigh technical AI knowledge by 2026. We're talking skills that can't be replicated by algorithms—things like building genuine trust, navigating ambiguity, or reading between the lines in high-stakes situations.

What's interesting is these aren't abstract concepts anymore. There's actual data backing which skills matter most, emerging frameworks for how to develop them, and practical approaches to teaching what we once thought was unteachable.

The job market's already shifting in this direction. Companies are starting to realize that the competitive edge isn't just about who has the best AI tools—it's about who can leverage human intelligence in ways machines simply can't match.
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ForeverBuyingDipsvip
· 12h ago
83% of workers think this way, but I think it's just collective self-consolation... Whatever, I'll just keep buying the dip anyway.
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FOMOmonstervip
· 12-07 17:59
Nah, I have to question this data. 83% of people think this way? Everyone around me is anxious... Anyway, the part about humanities skills being valuable is true, but the real question is: who the hell can actually teach emotional intelligence?
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probably_nothing_anonvip
· 12-07 17:57
NGL, these survey results seem a bit off... 83% of people think this way? From what I see, the ones getting laid off around me are always the guys who say "soft skills are important." Reality isn’t that sweet, is it?
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MetaverseHobovip
· 12-07 17:56
Ha, that 83% figure sounds pretty intimidating, but honestly I'm a bit skeptical... How much can you really trust those big company surveys anyway? But that aside, it's true that AI just can't compete with human touch—that much is spot on. Resonance, intuition, those muddled yet perfectly timed decisions... that's the stuff that's really valuable. Whoever figures out these soft skills before 2026 is going to win.
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CodeZeroBasisvip
· 12-07 17:34
83% of people say this, but I feel like I'm just trying to encourage myself... That being said, whether AI will take our jobs really depends on how it's used. Ultimately, human judgment is still the key.
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