AI is rewriting the normal first job—and, more and more, each function above it.
For HR leaders, the implication is direct: As the talents inside virtually each job shift, so does what it takes to rent, develop and retain expertise. That stress framed a youth employability occasion co-hosted by LinkedIn and the Singapore authorities’s suggestions unit, REACH, on the Ministry of Digital Improvement and Data (MDDI), the place the dialog shifted from what younger folks ought to do to what employers should do in response.
The market has tightened. LinkedIn information present hiring in Singapore down 5% yr on yr, whilst functions per job posting rose 6%—an indication of longer, extra selective hiring cycles. The Ministry of Manpower’s Q1 2026 Labour Market Report factors in the identical route: Employment remains to be rising, however retrenchments rose within the quarter—and rose most sharply amongst diploma holders and older staff as knowledge-intensive sectors restructure.
See additionally: How HR leaders can flip the ‘silver tsunami’ right into a expertise benefit
The headline session was a hearth between Josephine Teo, Minister for Digital Improvement and Data of Singapore, and Aneesh Raman, chief financial alternative officer at LinkedIn. Teo framed adaptability because the core ability of the second.
“The job market rewards those that keep adaptable,” she stated, noting that staff extra typically develop into the precise alternative than discover a excellent one ready. She urged folks to change into “AI bilingual”—pairing area experience with sufficient AI fluency to work in another way—with SkillsFuture and tie-ups with trade and unions because the help construction.
AI, she added, is one thing to lean into reasonably than concern. The concern about being left behind is legitimate, she acknowledged, however “the folks thriving will not be those avoiding it. They’re those studying to work with it.”
The actual differentiator, in her view, is judgment: How staff apply and interpret AI outputs is “the place you create actual worth.” Her wider goal is a workforce that’s “resilient, future-ready and leaves nobody behind.”
Raman, sharing the stage, pointed to the 5 human capabilities in his e-book, Open to Work—curiosity, braveness, creativity, compassion and communication—because the qualities that may matter most as AI absorbs routine work.
‘No job is protected on this second’
Raman prolonged that argument to each degree of the group. The anxiousness about graduates, he stated, can obscure a wider fact. “No job is protected on this second. Our jobs are altering it doesn’t matter what stage of profession we’re at, it doesn’t matter what job title now we have.”
He cited LinkedIn information suggesting 70% of the talents within the common job can have modified by 2030, which means a job can rework even for somebody who by no means strikes. Singapore’s labor information level in the identical route: Greater-skilled staff are now not insulated from displacement, with enterprise transformation reallocating work even inside once-resilient PMET roles.
His recommendation didn’t range by seniority: Have interaction with the instruments and assume by way of duties reasonably than titles.
“Determine what duties you’re going to present these instruments,” he stated—then use the freed-up time for the artistic, vital and collaborative work that builds a particular contribution.
On entry-level roles—the place LinkedIn information exhibits as much as 85% already embody duties that may be automated, even when the title has not modified—Raman was agency that the primary job is altering, not disappearing.
Graduates, he stated, are “not on a ladder, they’re on a wall,” and employers that put money into them acquire strengths older cohorts can’t match: AI fluency and an entrepreneurial mindset. He pointed to organizations performing on that wager—IBM tripling entry-level hiring, Salesforce operating builder packages and LinkedIn’s personal program the place candidates submit what they’ve constructed reasonably than a resume.
The openings bear this out: 1.3 million new AI-related roles globally, AI literacy demand in Singapore up greater than 70% yr on yr and entry-level hiring at small and mid-sized organizations up 152% and 100% between 2023 and 2025—making smaller organizations a launchpad reasonably than a fallback.
The shift, Raman urged, additionally addresses a long-running hole in skills-based hiring, the place managers nonetheless default to diploma and pedigree. The bridge is figure product. “Present me one thing you’ve performed, after which inform me the story of how you probably did it,” he stated—together with the place the individual failed, recovered and collaborated. He expects work product to form not simply who will get employed however who rises, pointing to the emergence of “tremendous ICs”— senior particular person contributors who advance on output reasonably than headcount.
He closed with a structural warning for employers: “The organizational chart goes to carry you again.”
He likened it to electrification, wherein organizations that merely swapped a steam engine for an electrical motor noticed no productiveness positive factors, whereas people who redesigned their workflows surged forward. The identical applies to AI—and the larger prize, he argued, lies in constructing new work round human functionality, not solely new workflows across the expertise.
The qualities that outlast the instruments
A separate #AskMeAnything phase with Feon Ang, managing director of Asia-Pacific at LinkedIn; Lim Hin Chuan, nation head of DBS Singapore; and Willson Cuaca, co-founder and managing associate at East Ventures, highlighted the traits employers will more and more display screen for and develop. Organisations will not be on the lookout for hires who know the whole lot, Ang stated—an unimaginable bar when expertise strikes this quick—however for the power to study and a progress mindset. Lim distilled what he values into three anchors: belief, possession and goal. Cuaca argued that standing out means being good throughout two or extra domains reasonably than being the very best at one.
On AI, the panel framed the expertise as a device with people on the heart. Cuaca urged staff to change into “energy customers” who perceive why a device works and to maintain “people within the loop” for the judgment and empathy AI can’t replicate. Careers, the panel agreed, now not transfer in a straight line, with direct bearing on how employers design development and develop expertise.
For workforce planning, the info presents a concrete steer. LinkedIn’s fastest-growing expertise in Singapore mix the technical and the human—AI, machine studying and information engineering; software program engineering and cloud; strategic enterprise and transformation; monetary administration; and management and communication—with AI literacy now a baseline expectation throughout all capabilities.
The throughline was constant: As AI reshapes work, the alerts price weighing in hiring and in development are shifting from credentials towards what folks can show, construct and choose for themselves.

