In This Article
- The Career Question Everyone Is Asking Wrong
- What "Career Sustainability" Actually Means
- How Does AI Build the Resilience That Protects Careers?
- Why Globally Mobile Workers Are the Key Test Case
- The Two Factors That Change Everything
Every week, someone publishes a new list of jobs that AI will eliminate. The lists are long, the tone is urgent, and the underlying message is clear: if your career intersects with AI, you are in danger. But a major new study of 361 working professionals across multiple countries has reached a conclusion that cuts directly against that story. AI, the research finds, does not threaten career sustainability — not directly. What it does instead is far more interesting.
The Career Question Everyone Is Asking Wrong
The question most people ask about AI and careers is: "Will AI take my job?" It is the wrong question. According to research published in 2026 from the University of Vaasa, the more useful question is: "What kind of person will AI help me become?" Because the study's central finding is that working with generative AI tools like ChatGPT does not harm careers. It builds a specific set of inner resources that determine whether a career can survive the next disruption — whatever form that disruption takes.
The researchers focused on a group of workers who face more uncertainty than almost anyone: expatriates — professionals working in a country that is not their own. These are people managing language barriers, cultural differences, unfamiliar legal systems, and the constant awareness that their work visa depends on staying employed. If AI helps anyone build resilience, the researchers reasoned, it should show up most clearly in this group.
What "Career Sustainability" Actually Means
Before you can understand what the study found, it helps to understand what researchers mean by a "sustainable" career. It does not simply mean having a job for a long time. A sustainable career, in the language of career construction theory developed by psychologist Mark Savickas, is one that remains meaningful, viable, and capable of growth — even as the world around it changes.
A sustainable career is not about job security in the old sense of "same company, same title, same salary forever." It is about remaining capable of finding and creating value no matter what the economic environment looks like. That distinction matters enormously in an era when AI is restructuring entire industries in real time.
The researchers measured career sustainability through three lenses: whether participants felt their current skills were still relevant, whether they expected to remain employable in the future, and whether their career felt purposeful and continuous rather than fragmented and accidental.
How Does AI Build the Resilience That Protects Careers?
Here is the finding that the researchers themselves called unexpected: generative AI collaboration does not directly improve career sustainability. There is no straight line between "uses AI" and "has a secure career." Instead, AI works through a middleman — a psychological resource that researchers call career adaptability.
Career adaptability has four parts. The first is concern — thinking ahead about your future and taking it seriously. The second is control — feeling that you are in charge of your own career path rather than being a passenger. The third is curiosity — actively exploring new roles, skills, and possibilities. The fourth is confidence — believing you can handle whatever career challenges come next. The study found that regularly working with generative AI significantly strengthened all four of these dimensions.
"GenAI collaboration scaffolds reflection, learning, and confidence — especially for professionals in complex and uncertain global contexts."
— Zhe Zhu, University of Vaasa · Acta Wasaensia, 2026Think of it this way. Using a powerful AI tool forces you to ask better questions, evaluate generated ideas critically, push beyond obvious answers, and iterate rapidly. These are not just AI skills. They are the exact same cognitive habits that make people resilient in any career situation — the ability to think ahead, stay curious, trust your judgment, and keep moving when things are uncertain. [INTERNAL LINK: how to develop career adaptability skills]
Why Globally Mobile Workers Are the Key Test Case
The choice to focus on expatriate professionals was not arbitrary. These workers face an unusually compressed version of the challenges that all knowledge workers will eventually face as AI reshapes industries. An Indian software engineer working in Germany, a Filipino nurse in the UK, or a Brazilian financial analyst in Singapore — all of them manage complexity and uncertainty every single day that most domestic workers encounter only occasionally.
In that context, the study found that generative AI functioned as something the researchers call a "career scaffold." Like the temporary frame put around a building under construction, AI tools give professionals a structure to experiment within, take intellectual risks, and build new capabilities — without the full cost of failure. An expatriate who uses AI to draft difficult emails in a second language, analyze unfamiliar regulatory frameworks, or rapidly learn new sector knowledge is not just being productive. They are continuously developing their adaptability.
The Two Factors That Change Everything
The study went one step further and asked: does this positive effect always happen, or are some conditions better than others? The answer involves two moderating forces that tilt the outcome significantly.
The first is trust in AI. Professionals who trusted their AI tools enough to genuinely integrate them into their workflow — rather than treating outputs with constant suspicion or ignoring them entirely — showed significantly stronger career adaptability gains. Trust here does not mean blind acceptance. It means a calibrated willingness to engage with AI as a working partner, while still applying human judgment. The more deeply someone engaged with the AI, the more the career benefits accumulated.
The second factor is job insecurity. Researchers found that professionals who felt more uncertain about their employment future actually benefited more from the adaptability pathway. Their greater uncertainty made them invest more actively in building the adaptive resources that would protect them. In other words, facing pressure to adapt can accelerate the very adaptation that makes a career sustainable. The AI provided the tools; the insecurity provided the motivation.
- Adaptability is the real prize — AI does not directly protect careers, but it reliably builds the psychological flexibility that does. That flexibility is transferable to any future disruption.
- Trust amplifies the benefit — Professionals who genuinely engage with AI rather than using it superficially develop far stronger career resilience than those who keep it at arm's length.
- Pressure accelerates growth — Professionals facing greater uncertainty derive more career benefit from AI collaboration, suggesting that difficulty and disruption can be genuine catalysts for adaptation.
"Career sustainability extends beyond employment continuity to encompass sustained growth, purpose, and psychological well-being in evolving work environments." — Zhe Zhu, Acta Wasaensia, 2026.
The story of AI and careers is not a story about machines taking over. It is a story about which humans develop the habit of adapting — and which ones stop. Every generation has faced a version of this choice. The printing press, the steam engine, the internet: each one widened the gap between those who engaged and those who retreated. AI is simply the latest chapter in the oldest story there is — the one about how human beings decide who they want to become when the world stops giving them the option to stay the same.
📄 Source & Citation
Primary Source: Zhu, Z. (2026). Generative Artificial Intelligence in Organizations: Strategic Decisions and Human Adaptations. Acta Wasaensia, 586. University of Vaasa. https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-395-272-0
Related Reading: Career Construction Theory — Annual Review of Organizational Psychology · University of Vaasa
Keywords: AI career sustainability, career adaptability, generative AI, expatriates, future of work, career construction theory, human-AI collaboration
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