Chimney Sweeps, Paper Boys, App Developers and Beyond ...

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Lifestyle
Tags
jobs, careers, change, innovation

Last week at the Gotham Happy Hour there was the usual catching up, general silliness and good conversation. We started talking about jobs we had in the past and some mused about professions other than their own that they might have chosen.  

 

That got me thinking about jobs that have disappeared over the years .. the TV repairman, typesetters, and elevator operators. I thought of the milkman,  but now we have Amazon to deliver so delivery still happens. Pinsetters became obsolete and the ice man no longer cometh. Long gone are the lamplighters and elevator operators.

 

These days there are also plenty of opportunities available that didn’t exist before. There are jobs that I never heard of, don’t have a clue about, and will leave for others to do. Even in fields I am familiar with there are new specialties and  sub-specialties. 

 

Change is inevitable. I feel like we live in the space between obsolescence and innovation and like to think I am prepared to ride whichever wave comes along. What changes do you see on the horizon? Are there endangered species among us? How ready are you to adapt?

Comments

Fred Klein

Another change is the Wednesday blogger. Well done!
Tessa Marquis

I was a proofreader. I used to send the NYTimes back to the editors with red circles around all the errors, but to no avail. Now we all start sentences with But, repeat the same word twice in a sentence, and eliminate the Oxford Comma. For shame!
Tessa Marquis

Explanation: I didn't work for the NYT. I mailed the snarky corrections to them.
Louis Cappelli

In the summer of my senior year of high school I worked at a small printing plant that printed the daily racing forms for Roosevelt Raceway Trotters, A LONG TIME AGO.
ODEY RAVIV

Shelley touches on the challenge that AI will present. Work will be swallowed by computers. People to People work must be valued and rewarded!

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