Echoes of the Past in a New Productivity Revolution
To contextualize the gravity of our current moment, Gherson calls back to the early 20th century, before the rise of factories and industrialization. Back then, she explains, craftspeople worked in guilds. One person might make an entire shoe from start to finish. They learned as an apprentice, took pride in their craft, and owned the final product.
Then came Frederick Winslow Taylor and scientific management. By breaking work into microtasks and standardizing every motion, Taylor helped usher in the assembly line. And with it, a profound trade-off: “Jobs that lost meaning, jobs that lost pride, jobs that lost identity.”
These lessons of the past weigh heavily for AI leaders like Gherson, who urges a mindful approach to navigating AI’s impact on white-collar work. She expresses concern that so many entry-level jobs being created today are focused on “babysitting AI”: prompting, labeling, auditing.
“All of these things aren't necessarily what someone went to college to do,” Gherson says.
“Is that deepening their mastery as professionals? Is it preparing them for leadership roles?”
To avoid repeating these kinds of trade-offs of the industrial era, Gherson argues we must fundamentally alter our approach: “We've got to rethink the architecture of work because it was designed for a different era. We need a methodology to do that. We need principles. We need agreement on how we're going to go about making the change.”