Goodbye humans! Jobs that are (and will be) performed by machines

The future is now
How many jobs will be lost?
Drivers
Factory operators
Travel agents
Telephone operators
Printing houses
Waiters
Ticket clerks
Insurance agents
Cashiers
Constructors
Bank tellers
Doctors
Stock clerks
Financial analysts
Lawyers
Seamstresses and dressmakers
Mail and delivery workers
Cleaners
Architects
War Pilots
Fast food chain workers
Security guards
Real estate agents
Farmers
Journalists
The future is now

This image is just an example of how machines are changing the world: Jobs that are slowly being performed by machines and are completely executed without humans. This is just another proof that the future is here.

How many jobs will be lost?

Due to technological advances, some jobs are sadly condemned to disappear because robots are replacing humans. Do you want to know what tasks and jobs are or will be no longer performed by humans?

Picture: Arseny Togulev / Unsplash

 

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Drivers

Self-driving is now a reality and cars that don't need a driver will, in the not-so-distant future, be among us. That's why millions of professional drivers will no longer be necessary.

Picture: Dan Gold / Unsplash

Factory operators

Storekeepers, production line workers, and operators of all kinds could no longer be needed in the factories.

Picture: Sam Moqadam / Unsplash

Travel agents

There are thousands of websites specialized in organizing travels and trips and it's the users who manage their reservations and flights from their own devices.

Picture: Luca Bravo / Unsplash

Telephone operators

There is a high percentage of customer service that is already carried out by machines that try to solve the clients' numerous problems.

Picture: Charanjeet Dhiman / Unsplash

Printing houses

In this case, more robots mean less use of paper and the final transition to digital. This will lead to the closing of many printers in the next decades.

Picture: Srdjan Ivankovic / Unsplash

Waiters

Many restaurants are already letting customers choose what they want from their menus and ordering them by themselves from an app or device, the orders go straight to the kitchen, taking out the waiter from the equation.

Picture: Louis Hansel / Unsplash

Ticket clerks

Websites and mobile apps are already in charge of managing your cinema tickets, whilst robots and machines could take care of selling food and beverages.

Picture: Myke Simon / Unsplash

Insurance agents

This is already a reality: The insurance company, the Japanese Fukoku, replaced 30 employees with an IA system.

Picture: Daria Nepriakhina / Unsplash

Cashiers

The number of these workers has already dropped throughout the world due to the use of self-payment, payment apps, contactless payment, and the strengthening of their surveillance systems. In the United States, Amazon has supermarkets with no employees where you can pay with the palm of your hand by reading your fingerprint with a sensor.

Picture: Sq Lim / Unsplash

Constructors

The Technology Review magazine estimates that a construction machine, known as Semi-Automated Mason (SAM), could equal the average work of 2-3 laborers.

Picture: Umit Yildirim / Unsplash

Bank tellers

Online banking takes less time and makes you forget about endless queues in your bank office.

Picture: Tech Daily / Unsplash

Doctors

Although they are essential to society, it is true that there are robots able to diagnose patients or to make really precise surgeries. However, we know that it is almost impossible for this kind of job to disappear.

Picture: Jafar Ahmed / Unsplash

Stock clerks

Tally is a robot created to do inventory, know what's missing, and what's not well positioned, and go through every product's price. According to Inverse, it could replace many workers in the next decade.

Picture: Dennis Siqueira / Unsplash

Financial analysts

The IA has started to dominate the sector thanks to its ability to determine patterns and to do immediate and safer transactions. The Spanish Manufacturers and Distributors Association estimates that a third of the financial analysts will lose their jobs before 2030.

Picture: Adeolu Eletu / Unsplash

Lawyers

Having a program specialized in taking care of routine tasks and keeping up with documents that could take up a lot of time for lawyers is not a crazy idea at all.

Picture: Campaign Creators / Unsplash

Seamstresses and dressmakers

Robots in the textile industry are very precise, efficient, and effective and don't need breaks. Many multinational companies in the sector are already operating with robots in their factories.

Picture: Marilia Castelli / Unsplash

Mail and delivery workers

Robots and drones delivering packages are now a reality, even more so due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Picture: Maarten Van den Heuvel / Unsplash

Cleaners

Another sector that has grown due to the pandemic is cleaning, and disinfecting robots that help humans to avoid doing dirty, and sometimes, dangerous tasks.

Picture: Katie Pearse / Unsplash

Architects

John Pugliano, the author of 'The Robots are coming', foresees a future where simple and routinary buildings can be designed with specialized programs. Of course, more artistic and special creations would be still designed by architects.

Picture: Evgeniy Surzhan / Unsplash

War Pilots

Planes without pilots are also already in use, and pilots will be replaced and derived to other positions.

Picture: Patrick Tomasso / Unsplash

 

Fast food chain workers

The University of Oxford estimates that 81 % of processes and steps in a fast-food kitchen can be automated. It looks like if it can be done, it will be done.

Picture: Brett Jordan / Unsplash

Security guards

The current surveillance and safety systems are so good that many companies will get rid of human personnel.

Picture: Collin Armstrong / Unsplash

Real estate agents

In the same book, John Pugliano also predicts that part of real estate agents could disappear due to the number of websites and apps where you can look for housing options yourself without an intermediary.

Picture: Towfiqu Barbhuiya / Unsplash

Farmers

Milking cows, picking up vegetables, and removing weeds may be a thing of the past for humans. Modern Farmer explains how robots can replace more than one million farmers just in the United States.

Picture: Vladimir Kudinov / Unsplash

Journalists

Bots replacing humans is not as mental as it sounds. According to Verge, the Associated Press agency has been using bots since 2014 to create their quarterly income reports.

Picture: Alejandro Escamilla / Unsplash