Research highlights shift toward task transformation and rising demand for AI-driven workforce planning
A new global study involving Woxsen University has found that nearly one in three jobs could see more than 50% of tasks augmented by generative AI, pointing to a major shift in how work is structured and executed.
The research, conducted in collaboration with the University of St. Thomas and North Star Policy Action, focuses on workforce trends in Minnesota, USA, but carries significant implications for India’s rapidly evolving job market.
At the center of the initiative is the AI Research Centre at Woxsen University, which contributed to both the study and the development of a GenAI Job Intelligence Dashboard. The platform translates complex labor market data into real-time insights, enabling organizations to identify high-exposure roles, track emerging job categories, and monitor shifting skill demands.
“The real disruption is not job loss, but task transformation.” – Dr. Hemachandran K, Woxsen University
Designed to support workforce planning and hiring strategies, the dashboard also allows benchmarking of talent trends across industries, reflecting a broader shift toward data-driven decision-making as AI adoption accelerates.
The findings challenge common concerns around job displacement, emphasizing that AI exposure is more closely linked to task transformation than outright job loss. As generative AI tools reshape workflows, roles are expected to evolve rather than disappear, creating new opportunities alongside disruption.
The initiative also underscores the growing role of academic institutions in preparing future-ready talent. Faculty, researchers, and MBA students at Woxsen University actively participated in building the dashboard, working with real-world datasets and global research inputs to bridge the gap between academia and industry.
As enterprises continue integrating AI into business processes, the study highlights an urgent need for reskilling, curriculum alignment, and proactive workforce planning. It also calls for responsible AI adoption, supported by governance frameworks that balance innovation with workforce welfare.
With AI set to redefine job roles at scale, the report signals a shift from static workforce models to dynamic, intelligence-driven strategies for managing talent in the digital era.
