The conversation about AI and jobs is missing a beat
A lot of the discussion around AI and the future of work is framed around replacement. Which roles will disappear, which will survive, and how quickly the shift will happen. It’s an understandable reaction to rapid technological change.
But it misses a more important shift. The real story isn’t just that AI can do more. It’s that individuals can now build, ship and distribute independently, often without the layers of coordination that used to be required.
The cost of building has collapsed
Not long ago, launching something online required multiple roles, infrastructure and time. Even simple ideas came with overhead; development, hosting, approvals, handoffs.
That’s changed quickly. Today, one person can design, prototype and publish something meaningful in hours. AI has accelerated this, but it’s part of a broader shift towards simpler, more direct ways of turning ideas into live outputs.
This is where a more serious version of DIY (Do It Yourself) emerges. Not as a hobby, or a side hustle, but as a professional capability.
At the same time, the system is under pressure
While individual capability is increasing, the structures around work are becoming less stable.
We’re seeing this across industries. The BBC recently announced plans to cut around 2,000 jobs (roughly 10% of its workforce) in one of its largest restructures in over a decade. More broadly, knowledge workers are estimated to lose close to a full working day each week to meetings and administrative overhead.
The implication is hard to ignore: even the most established organisations are being forced to shrink, while expecting the same, or more, output.
The real bottleneck isn’t building, it’s coordination
Inside most companies, the constraint is no longer technical capability. It’s coordination.
The time lost to meetings, approvals and handoffs often outweighs the time it takes to actually create something. As tools improve and building becomes easier, that imbalance becomes more obvious and harder to justify.
For business leaders, this raises an uncomfortable question: how much of modern work exists purely to manage itself?
The safest position is not a role, it’s a capability
In that environment, job security starts to look different.
It’s less about being embedded in a specific role or organisation, and more about having the ability to create something independently. The capability to build, publish and iterate. To take an idea and make it real, becomes a form of leverage.
That doesn’t mean everyone needs to become a founder. But it does mean that those who can operate independently have more options, and more resilience, in a changing market.
Learning to build without permission
My own experience reinforced this shift.
Early on, I faced a series of setbacks – rejections, missed opportunities, and slow initial traction. Without external validation, the only option was to keep building and see what worked.
That process; finding one user, then ten, then a hundred, is rarely visible from the outside. But it compounds. Over time, the focus shifts away from seeking permission and towards simply shipping.
Today, the business has grown to more than 2 million users, largely through word of mouth. The more important lesson wasn’t scale, it was independence.
DIY as a professional advantage
What’s emerging is a form of professional DIY. The ability to operate without being blocked by process, infrastructure or dependency.
This doesn’t replace teams entirely. But it does change where value sits. Individuals and small teams with high leverage can now produce outcomes that previously required much larger structures.
As a result, the gap between large organisations and independent operators is narrowing. Not because organisations are becoming weaker, but because individuals are becoming significantly more capable.
Build, publish, repeat
AI will continue to change what’s possible. But the direction of travel is already clear.
The advantage is shifting towards those who can move quickly, adapt, and consistently turn ideas into real outputs, not occasionally, but repeatedly.
In an AI-driven economy, job security won’t come from roles or institutions. It will come from the ability to build, ship and adapt independently, on demand.
In that sense, the safest job in the AI era might not be a job at all.
It might be the ability to build your own.