
In "Humanity Works," workplace futurist Alexandra Levit reveals how companies like Deloitte and Pepsi blend human creativity with AI. This award-winning guide asks: Will your skills survive 2030? Executives call it the roadmap for maintaining competitive advantage in our tech-driven future.
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Imagine walking into a modern manufacturing plant where just six people oversee a football field-sized space filled with automated systems. This isn't science fiction-it's today's reality. As AI and robotics advance, many fear human obsolescence in the workplace. Yet Alexandra Levit's "Humanity Works" offers a more nuanced vision: a future where human creativity, judgment, and interpersonal skills become more valuable alongside technology, not less. Unlike doomsayers predicting workplace apocalypse, Levit provides a practical roadmap for human-machine collaboration. The coming decade will transform how we work, but our uniquely human capabilities will remain irreplaceable assets in this new landscape. The question isn't whether machines will replace us, but how we'll adapt to work with them.