AI, Job Losses, and the Fear Narrative We Keep Getting Wrong

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A recent news segment making the rounds warns of a “tsunami” of AI‑driven job losses and suggests many people fear their careers could disappear within the next five years. It’s a familiar storyline. AI is coming for your job. Whole industries are about to vanish. Panic now, adapt later. [youtube.com]

But if you’ve worked in IT for any length of time, this narrative should sound oddly familiar.

We’ve heard it before. Cloud was going to wipe out sysadmins. Virtualisation was going to end infrastructure roles. SaaS was going to remove the need for IT support altogether. Each time, the jobs didn’t disappear — they changed. And in many cases, they became more valuable, more strategic, and frankly more interesting.

The current AI fear cycle feels no different.

Fear Sells Headlines, Not Understanding

News segments like this aren’t wrong to highlight anxiety. People are worried. AI tools are improving quickly, and many white‑collar roles are seeing parts of their work automated or accelerated. That uncertainty is real, and dismissing it would be unhelpful.

What is unhelpful is framing AI as a sudden, unstoppable force that simply erases careers overnight. That framing ignores how work actually evolves in the real world. It also ignores a critical detail that rarely makes the headline: AI doesn’t remove jobs — it removes tasks.

And tasks have always been replaced.

Spreadsheets didn’t eliminate accountants. They eliminated manual ledger work. Email didn’t eliminate office workers. It eliminated memos and fax machines. Cloud services didn’t eliminate IT departments. They eliminated racking servers at 2am.

AI is doing the same thing, just faster and more visibly.

The Real Risk Isn’t AI — It’s Standing Still

If there’s a genuine risk highlighted by the video, it’s not mass unemployment caused by machines. It’s what happens when people — and organisations — refuse to adapt.

Roles that are heavily repetitive, process‑driven, and resistant to change will feel pressure first. Not because AI is “taking jobs”, but because AI exposes inefficiencies that were previously tolerated. When a tool can draft, summarise, analyse, or generate in seconds, it forces an uncomfortable question: Why were we doing this the slow way in the first place?

For MSPs and IT professionals, this should be a warning — but also an opportunity.

If your value proposition is built entirely on manual effort, reactive work, or time‑based billing, AI will challenge that model. If your value proposition is built on judgement, security, governance, architecture, and business outcomes, AI becomes leverage.

AI as an Amplifier, Not a Replacement

What the fear narrative consistently misses is that AI works best with context, accountability, and oversight — all things humans still provide.

Copilot doesn’t understand your client’s risk appetite. It doesn’t own compliance obligations. It doesn’t carry professional liability. And it certainly doesn’t sit in front of a board explaining why a decision was made.

What it does do is remove friction. It shortens the distance between intent and outcome. It allows skilled people to focus less on mechanics and more on meaning.

That’s not job destruction. That’s job elevation.

What This Means for MSPs and SMBs Right Now

For MSPs, the message shouldn’t be “AI is coming for your engineers”. It should be “AI is coming for your lowest‑value activities”.

Ticket triage, basic documentation, reporting, summarisation, first‑draft responses — these are exactly the areas where AI can help reduce noise and free up senior staff to do higher‑order work.

For SMB customers, the conversation shouldn’t start with fear. It should start with capability. AI isn’t about replacing staff; it’s about helping small teams punch above their weight without burning out.

The businesses that win won’t be the ones that adopt AI fastest. They’ll be the ones that adopt it thoughtfully, with clear governance, realistic expectations, and a focus on measurable outcomes.

The Question We Should Be Asking Instead

So instead of asking, “Will AI take my job?”, the better question is:

Which parts of my job shouldn’t I be doing anymore?

That’s a far more productive conversation — and one that leads to adaptation rather than paralysis.

AI will continue to change how work is done. Some roles will shrink. New ones will appear. Most will evolve. That’s not a crisis; it’s the normal cycle of technology.

The real danger isn’t AI. The real danger is believing the fear narrative and doing nothing.

Copilot Isn’t Replacing You — It’s Replacing the Worst Parts of Your Job

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I get the frustration. Microsoft Copilot can be poor at very specific, fussy tasks — Word formatting being the poster child. That’s not a controversial take, that’s just reality right now. If you’ve ever asked Copilot to “make this document look exactly like the template” and watched it confidently butcher margins, headings, and spacing, you’re not imagining things.

Copilot is not a replacement for someone who actually knows how to use Word properly. Especially not when a document has nuance, layout rules, or edge cases. Formatting is precision work, and Copilot is not a precision tool.

Where Microsoft (and plenty of enthusiastic commentators) get this wrong is by overselling Copilot as a “worker replacement”. It isn’t. Framing it that way sets the product up to fail and users up to be disappointed. Copilot is far closer to an assistant that’s good at rough drafts, restructuring ideas, and reducing cognitive load — and bad at exact execution.

That distinction matters.

Copilot works best when you treat it like a thinking aid, not a hands replacement. It’s excellent at getting a first-pass draft down when you’re staring at a blank page. It’s useful for rewording content, changing tone, summarising long material, or pulling scattered ideas into something coherent. It’s very good at explaining concepts and generating examples when your brain is already fried.

Where it consistently falls over is anything that requires exactness. Precise formatting. Layout-sensitive Word documents. Edge-case instructions. Anything that boils down to “do exactly this, not approximately this”.

And that’s fine — as long as we’re honest about it.

If someone genuinely believes Copilot is going to replace competent knowledge workers any time soon, that’s delusional. What Copilot replaces isn’t judgment or skill. It replaces blank pages. It replaces repetitive writing. It replaces the mental tax of context switching between tasks that don’t actually need human creativity.

Bad experience with Copilot doesn’t mean it’s useless. It means Microsoft’s marketing is miles ahead of the product’s actual reliability. Used correctly, Copilot saves time. Used incorrectly, it creates frustration.

The trick isn’t asking “Why isn’t Copilot perfect?”
It’s asking “What’s this tool actually good at — and where do I still need to be the professional?”

That’s the difference between disappointment and productivity.

Proving ROI on AI: Simple Measures That Actually Matter for Small Business

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One of the first questions I get from small business owners after deploying AI is predictable: “How do we prove this is worth the money?”

It’s a fair question. Budgets are tight, margins matter, and nobody wants another shiny tool that looks good in a demo but disappears into daily noise. The mistake many SMBs make, however, is trying to measure AI ROI the same way they measure hardware or software licences. AI—especially Microsoft Copilot—doesn’t work like that.

The good news? Proving ROI doesn’t need complex dashboards or consultant-led studies. In fact, the simplest measures are often the most powerful.

Start with time saved, not money earned. Copilot’s biggest immediate impact isn’t revenue generation—it’s friction removal. Ask staff one simple question: “What tasks do you finish faster now?” Email drafting, meeting summaries, document creation, policy updates, spreadsheet analysis—these all add up. If a staff member saves just 15 minutes a day, that’s over an hour a week. Multiply that across a team and suddenly the licence cost looks very small.

Next, look at output quality and consistency. Copilot doesn’t just make people faster—it helps them start better. First drafts are clearer. Reports are more structured. Emails are more professional. Policies are more consistent. You can prove this ROI by comparing before-and-after examples. If fewer documents need rewriting or fewer emails bounce back for clarification, that’s real operational value.

Another overlooked metric is decision speed. Copilot surfaces information that already exists in Microsoft 365—emails, files, chats, meetings—but does so in seconds rather than hours. Faster decisions reduce delays, reduce rework, and reduce risk. Ask leaders how long it takes now to get answers they previously had to chase.

Then there’s employee confidence and capability. This one is harder to put on a spreadsheet, but it matters. Copilot acts like a thinking partner—helping less experienced staff produce work that previously required senior input. That reduces bottlenecks and frees up your most expensive people to focus on higher‑value work.

Finally, measure what you stopped doing. Fewer manual notes. Fewer copy‑paste workflows. Fewer “can you rewrite this?” requests. ROI is often hidden in the work that quietly disappears.

The reality is this: if you expect Copilot to magically create new revenue, you’ll be disappointed. But if you measure what it removes—time, friction, rework, hesitation—you’ll quickly see the return.

AI ROI for small business isn’t about chasing big numbers. It’s about reclaiming capacity. And that’s something every SMB can feel, measure, and prove.

CIA Brief 20260308

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Introducing the new Microsoft Teams events experience –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jG4cPfjYuQ

RedVDS and the Invisible Infrastructure of Modern Cybercrime –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/corporate-responsibility/topics/cybersecurity/stories/redvds/

Powerful image editing, now in PowerPoint –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365insiderblog/powerful-image-editing-now-in-powe…

AI as tradecraft: How threat actors operationalize AI –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/03/06/ai-as-tradecraft-how-threat-actors-operati…

More choice, more flexibility: xAI Grok 4.1 Fast now available in Microsoft Copilot Studio –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-copilot/blog/copilot-studio/more-choice-more-flexibility-…

Windows news you can use: February 2026 –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/windows-itpro-blog/windows-news-you-can-use-february-2026/…

Malicious AI Assistant Extensions Harvest LLM Chat Histories –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/03/05/malicious-ai-assistant-extensions-harvest-…

Simplify cross-tenant user migrations with Microsoft 365 orchestrator –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365insiderblog/simplify-cross-tenant-user-migrati…

Defending the gates: How a global coalition disrupted Tycoon 2FA, a major driver of initial access and large-scale online impersonation –

https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2026/03/04/how-a-global-coalition-disrupted-tycoon/

Inside Tycoon2FA: How a leading AiTM phishing kit operated at scale –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/03/04/inside-tycoon2fa-how-a-leading-aitm-phishi…

Copilot can reschedule conflicting events in Outlook –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365insiderblog/copilot-can-reschedule-conflicting…

A new Microsoft 365 “E7” tier could cost up to $99 a month for premium AI — but only 3.3% of existing users pay for Copilot –

https://www.windowscentral.com/artificial-intelligence/the-next-microsoft-365-e7-tier-could-cost-up…

Protect browser-based work on agency-managed Windows PCs –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoftintuneblog/protect-browser-based-work-on-agency-m…

OAuth redirection abuse enables phishing and malware delivery –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/03/02/oauth-redirection-abuse-enables-phishing-m…

SharePoint at 25: How Microsoft is putting knowledge to work in the AI era –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2026/03/02/sharepoint-at-25-how-microsoft-is-put…

Introducing new agentic building in SharePoint and more updates –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/spblog/introducing-new-agentic-building-in-sharepoint-and-…

After hours

Silicon Valley Season 6 Gilfoyle’s AI Chat Bot War  – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWIusSdn1e4

Editorial

If you found this valuable, the I’d appreciate a ‘like’ or perhaps a donation at https://ko-fi.com/ciaops. This helps me know that people enjoy what I have created and provides resources to allow me to create more content. If you have any feedback or suggestions around this, I’m all ears. You can also find me via email director@ciaops.com and on X (Twitter) at https://www.twitter.com/directorcia.

If you want to be part of a dedicated Microsoft Cloud community with information and interactions daily, then consider becoming a CIAOPS Patron – www.ciaopspatron.com.

Watch out for the next CIA Brief next week

Why You Should Stop Push Prompting and Start Pull Prompting Your AI

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Most people interact with AI using what I call push prompting. They carefully craft a single, often very long prompt, hit enter, and hope the AI gets it right. When it doesn’t, they tweak the prompt, add more instructions, and try again. This works—sometimes—but it’s brittle, time‑consuming, and surprisingly easy to get wrong.

There’s a better approach: pull prompting.

Instead of pushing everything into one massive prompt, you ask the AI to pull the information it needs by asking you questions first. You turn the interaction into a short conversation rather than a one-shot command. The difference in output quality can be dramatic.

The Problem with Push Prompting

Push prompting assumes you already know:

  • Exactly what you want

  • Exactly how to explain it

  • Exactly what context the AI needs

In reality, most tasks are fuzzy at the start. You might know the goal, but not the structure, tone, depth, or constraints. So you overcompensate by writing a huge prompt packed with assumptions. The AI then has to guess which parts matter most, often producing something that is technically correct but practically unusable.

Push prompting also doesn’t scale well. As tasks get more complex—blog posts, policies, scripts, strategies—the likelihood of missing a key detail increases.

What Is Pull Prompting?

Pull prompting flips the model.

Instead of saying:

“Write a 500-word blog post on X, for audience Y, with tone Z, including examples A, B, and C…”

You say:

“I want to write a blog post. Ask me the questions you need before you start.”

Now the AI becomes an interviewer, not just a generator.

It will ask about:

  • Audience

  • Purpose

  • Tone

  • Depth

  • Constraints

  • Examples or preferences you hadn’t even considered

Each answer you give reduces ambiguity. By the time the AI starts writing, it has much richer context than any single prompt could reasonably contain.

Why Pull Prompting Works Better

Pull prompting aligns with how large language models actually work. They perform best when context is:

  • Incremental

  • Clarified through interaction

  • Corrected early, not after the fact

You’re also outsourcing the prompt engineering to the AI itself. The model already knows what information improves outputs—it just needs permission to ask.

This approach reduces rework, improves relevance, and produces results that feel tailored rather than generic.

A Simple Pull Prompting Pattern

Here’s a reusable pattern you can apply almost anywhere:

“I want help with [task].
Before you start, ask me any questions you need to do this well.
Ask them one at a time.”

That’s it.

You’ll often find that by the third or fourth question, the solution has already taken shape in your head—something that rarely happens with push prompting.

When to Use Pull Prompting

Pull prompting shines when:

  • The task is complex or creative

  • The audience matters

  • The output will be reused or published

  • You don’t yet know exactly what “good” looks like

In short, if you care about the result, let the AI pull the details instead of forcing you to push them all upfront.

Image generation–analysis

This recent article:

https://blog.ciaops.com/2026/03/07/comparing-ai-services-image-generation/

highlights some important considerations for me when comes to AI services. It is also important to consider that given the outputs are images how they are perceived is (aka like/dislike) is subjective. However, there are some general principles we can apply (aka correctness).

I find it interesting in a world where the current hype is around Claude that that result was the poorest I think most would agree.

Created with Claude Sonnet 4.6 in 357 seconds

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The clear winner, at least when it comes to image creation is Nano Banana in this test.

Created Nano Banana in 54 seconds

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It is interesting how fast Grok created an image but given the output you can clearly see why that is.

Created with Grok in 7 seconds

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But to me, if you look at the three images Copilot created, especially the default one here:

Created with Copilot in 75 seconds

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you would have to say that produced a quality result well ahead of others.

I hear a lot of complaints about the poor quality of Copilot but in my tests, like this image generation experiment, simply don’t bear that out, at least for me. Remember, I used the same prompt with all the models and the outputs are here.

The most interesting thing for me from this test (apart from the Grok speed) was the monumental fail of Claude to event get close to the others with this test. I fully appreciate that images may noty be Claude’s strength but, as a business, do you want to be constantly switching between models for images, then number, then code? That’s were the real productivity suck is in this new AI world, copying and pasting outputs to the right place.

To me, Copilot still wins as the best option for the overall best option for business information workers and these tests reinforce that.

Comparing AI services–Image generation

A while back I wrote this article : Comparing AI services–an objective analysis? –

https://blog.ciaops.com/2025/09/12/comparing-ai-services-an-objective-analysis/

I gave various AI services the same image prompt and this is the result

Copilot (default) – 75 seconds

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Copilot (Think deeply) – 88 seconds

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Copilot (Create infographic) – 100 seconds

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Claude Sonnet 4.6 – 357 seconds

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Gemini – Thinking [Nano Banana 2] – 54 seconds

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Grok – Create image – 7 seconds

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ChatGPT – 60 seconds

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New Publication – Achieving SMB1001:2026, M365 PowerShell Automation Guide

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https://directorcia.gumroad.com/l/smb1001-2006-ps

Achieving SMB1001:2026. Microsoft 365 PowerShell Automation Guide

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