
Imagine February 2020: Life's normal, markets are booming, then suddenly—COVID-19 pandemic flips everything overnight. AI CEO Matt Shumer says we're in that "seems overblown" moment right now, but for something way bigger. In his recent raw and honest essay on X (formerly Twitter) titled 'Something Big Is Happening,' he warns white-collar "screen jobs" are first to be hit and become obsolete due to AI. Not in 10 years, but now. After years of building AI at HyperWrite, Shumer's seen it firsthand: Models like GPT-5.3 Codex don't just assist—they replace hours of work, even debugging code or drafting reports better than teams of professionals.
Shumer is blunt in his essay, as he writes, "If your job happens on a screen... AI is coming for significant parts of it." Anthropic's Dario Amodei also said something similar recently. He predicts 50% of entry-level white-collar roles gone in just 1-5 years.
Talking of AI changing the way we work, Shumer is living it—as he says for his own work, he simply describes an app in plain English, walks away, returns to a finished, self-tested product. No edits needed.
Based on his essay, here we list the six most exposed professions that might get wiped off completely, as per Shumer—and what to do instead:

AI already reads contracts, summarises case law, and drafts briefs—rivalling junior lawyers. Shumer says: Firms use it like "instant associates."
Pivot to: Strategy, client trust, courtroom presence. AI lacks human judgment for high-stakes ethics.

Spreadsheets? Investment memos? AI crunches data, spots trends, and writes polished reports faster.
Pivot to: Relationship-building, deal-making, risk calls needing real-world nuance which AI can't feel.

From blog posts to ad copy, AI generates human-quality work indistinguishable to most and in just a jiffy.
Pivot to: Original storytelling, brand voice, audience connection—AI is generic; humans spark emotion.

Shumer reveals AI writes thousands of flawless lines, tests itself, and iterates like a dev team.
Pivot to: Architecture, innovation, cross-team orchestration. Code is table stakes; vision wins.

AI reads scans, analyses results, suggests diagnoses, reviews literature—often matching that of MDs.
So switch to: Patient empathy, complex cases, treatment plans. Humans heal holistically.

Forget chatbots—new AI agents handle multi-step issues end-to-end, 24/7.
Pivot to: High-touch escalation, loyalty-building, creative solutions AI can't personalise.

"This isn't someday. It's started," Shumer writes in his essay. He further says that free AI is years behind. Instead, paid tools like Claude Opus 4.6, GPT-5.2, etc., are game-changers. And so, one should try speding atleast 1 hour daily experimenting with AI. "Try harder problems. New tools. Six months = you'll outpace 99%," he writes.
Shumer's urgent: Build savings, cut debt, chase passions AI can't touch (physical work, licensed roles buy time). Teach adaptability and AI mastery to kids early on, not obsolete degrees. The upside of AI: Dreams unlock—build apps, write books, learn anything instantly.
AI's self-improving and it can soon outpace humans at most jobs. So, "Prepare like your career depends on it. Because it does," says Shumer.
What's your job risk? Share below!