The Six Human Abilities That Matter Most in the Age of AI

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Every time a new wave of AI tools lands, the same fear resurfaces: What happens to the humans?
The uncomfortable truth is that some work will disappear. But the more important question is this: what work becomes more valuable?

The image above nails it. In an age where machines can generate content, write code, analyse data, and automate workflows at scale, the differentiator isn’t technical capability alone. It’s the human abilities that sit around the technology.

These six skills aren’t soft. They’re not optional. And for MSPs and IT professionals, they may be the difference between being replaced… and being indispensable.

1. Questioning: The Skill AI Can’t Replace

AI is exceptional at answering questions.
It’s terrible at deciding which questions actually matter.

Most poor outcomes with AI don’t come from bad tools. They come from bad prompts, shallow thinking, or unchallenged assumptions. The real value comes from people who know how to ask:

  • What problem are we actually solving?
  • Who benefits from this answer?
  • What’s missing from this output?

In an MSP context, questioning is what separates “we deployed Copilot” from “we changed how the business operates”. It’s knowing when to push back on a client request, when to reframe the problem, and when the obvious solution isn’t the right one.

AI accelerates answers. Humans decide direction.

2. Taste: Knowing What “Good” Looks Like

AI can generate ten versions in seconds.
Taste is knowing which one to ship.

Whether it’s a policy document, a client report, a security recommendation, or a piece of marketing content, AI will happily give you something. What it won’t give you is judgement.

Taste is pattern recognition built over time. It’s experience. It’s knowing when something feels off, even if it technically works. It’s why two MSPs can use the same tools and produce vastly different outcomes.

In a world flooded with AI-generated noise, taste becomes a competitive advantage. Clients don’t pay for volume. They pay for discernment.

3. Iteration: Progress Beats Perfection

AI enables speed, but humans enable momentum.

One of the most overlooked skills in the AI era is the willingness to iterate in public. To test, refine, adjust, and improve without waiting for perfection. AI lowers the cost of iteration dramatically — but only if people are willing to use it that way.

MSPs who succeed with AI don’t roll out massive, once‑off transformations. They make small changes, learn quickly, and build confidence over time. Iteration is how ideas become systems, and experiments become offerings.

AI gives you the draft. Humans do the shaping.

4. Composition: Seeing the Whole, Not Just the Parts

AI is very good at isolated tasks.
Humans are still better at composition.

Composition is the ability to connect ideas, systems, and outcomes into something coherent. It’s understanding how security impacts productivity, how automation affects culture, and how tools interact across the Microsoft ecosystem.

For MSPs, composition is architectural thinking. It’s not just deploying solutions, but designing experiences. It’s knowing how Entra ID, Intune, Defender, Copilot, and business processes fit together — and explaining that clearly to non‑technical decision makers.

AI assists. Humans integrate.

5. Allocation: Deciding Where Effort Belongs

Time and attention are the new scarcity.

AI creates the illusion that everything can be done, all at once. Allocation is the skill of deciding what should be done — and what should be ignored.

Great operators know where human effort adds the most value, and where machines should take over. They know when to automate, when to delegate to AI, and when a human touch is non‑negotiable.

For MSPs under constant pressure, allocation is survival. It’s choosing focus over busyness, leverage over labour, and outcomes over activity.

6. Integrity: The Non‑Negotiable Advantage

This one matters more than most people realise.

As AI becomes capable of generating convincing outputs at scale, trust becomes the real currency. Integrity is what ensures AI is used responsibly, ethically, and transparently — especially when clients don’t fully understand what’s happening behind the scenes.

Integrity shows up in how data is handled, how recommendations are made, and how risks are communicated. It’s choosing long‑term trust over short‑term gains.

Technology changes fast. Reputation doesn’t.


The Bottom Line

AI isn’t replacing humans.
It’s exposing the difference between people who add judgement… and people who just follow instructions.

The future belongs to those who can question, curate, iterate, connect, prioritise, and act with integrity. Tools will come and go. These abilities compound.

And the MSPs who invest in them now won’t just survive the AI era — they’ll define it.

From Push to Pull–A more effective approach to prompting

Video URL = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYCVKQwEFgY

In this video, I reveal the game-changing secret to getting incredible results from AI tools like Copilot. If you’ve ever spent ages crafting detailed prompts only to get disappointing answers, you’re not alone! I show you how to flip the script with a simple mindset shift—turning your AI from a passive tool into an active collaborator. Discover the difference between push prompting and pull prompting, and learn a proven formula that boosts accuracy and makes your AI do the heavy lifting. Watch as I demonstrate this method in real-world scenarios, including Microsoft Excel, and see how a conversational approach can transform your workflow. Get ready to unlock smarter, faster, and more useful AI results—starting today! You can find my full publication at – https://directorcia.gumroad.com/l/aaiprompt

I’m Watching Business Owners Work Harder Than Ever – and Get Less Done

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I’m seeing something that would have been unthinkable a few years ago.

Business owners are working harder than ever and achieving less than they did before.

Sixty‑hour weeks. Back‑to‑back meetings. Calendars so full there’s no white space left to actually think. They’re always “on”, always responding, always busy. And yet, when you strip it back, progress feels slower, decisions take longer, and strategy keeps getting pushed to “next week”.

At the same time, there’s a smaller group of business owners who seem to be playing a completely different game.

Same market.
Same team size.
Same pressures.

But they’ve quietly bought back 20 or more hours every week.

Not by hiring armies of staff.
Not by working harder.
And not by finding some mythical work‑life balance hack.

They’ve done it by changing what they do versus what AI does.

And that’s the part most people still don’t want to hear.

The Old Rulebook Worked – Until It Didn’t

For the last 20 years, the advice for business owners was brutally simple:

Work harder.
Do more.
Hustle.

If you hit your limits, you hired more people.

And for a long time, that worked. There was a reasonably straight line between hours worked and output created. More effort generally meant more results. More people meant more capacity.

But that line has snapped.

Not bent. Not blurred. Broken.

What used to be a law of work no longer applies.

The Moment Everything Changed

Not long ago, AI crossed a line most people didn’t notice at the time.

AI agents arrived.

And suddenly, you could hand off what used to be an eight‑hour task and get something usable back in minutes. Research that once swallowed entire days now runs overnight. Analysis that used to be blocked out in your calendar is ready before your first coffee.

This wasn’t just another productivity tool.

It rewrote the productivity equation itself.

For the first time, the constraint on output wasn’t human effort. It was decision‑making. Knowing what to do with the output became more important than doing the work to create it.

And that’s where the gap started to open.

Work Has Split Into Two Types

What I see now is that work has quietly divided itself into two categories.

The first is execution work: drafting, researching, summarising, analysing, documenting, formatting, preparing. Necessary, but largely mechanical.

The second is judgement work: deciding what matters, setting direction, weighing trade‑offs, saying yes to the right things and no to the rest.

AI is eating the first category at an alarming rate.

And many business owners are still spending most of their week buried in it.

They’re writing the documents.
They’re doing the research.
They’re preparing the decks.
They’re stuck in the weeds.

Not because they need to be there, but because that’s how they’ve always worked.

The Business Owners Who “Get It” Look Very Different

The business owners who figured this out early don’t look busier. They look calmer.

They’re not in operations anymore. They’re in strategy.

They’re not executing tasks. They’re making decisions.

They’re not asking, “How do I get through more work today?”
They’re asking, “What work should I never be doing again?”

They’ve learned how to hand off the right work to AI and keep the work that only a human business owner can do. Not blindly. Not recklessly. But deliberately.

That shift alone frees up hours every single day.

And those hours compound.

This Is Why the Gap Is Growing So Fast

Here’s the uncomfortable truth.

The gap between these two groups of business owners isn’t linear. It’s exponential.

While one group is still spending their time producing outputs, the other is spending their time deciding where the business should go next. While one group is drowning in tasks, the other is looking for leverage.

AI doesn’t just save time. It reallocates attention.

And attention is now the scarcest resource in running a business.

The business owners who are winning aren’t smarter or more disciplined. They’ve simply stopped doing work that no longer requires a human.

Everyone else is still busy proving they can.

This Isn’t About Replacing People

Let’s be clear. This isn’t about replacing teams or stripping businesses back to the bone.

It’s about redeploying human effort where it actually creates value.

AI doesn’t remove the need for leadership. It exposes the absence of it.

If your day is filled with work AI could already handle, that’s not a badge of honour. It’s a signal. One that says your role hasn’t evolved as fast as the tools around you have.

The Question Every Business Owner Needs to Ask

The most important question right now isn’t, “How do I work harder?”

It’s this:

“What am I still doing that AI could do better, faster, or cheaper than me?”

Until that question is answered honestly, nothing changes.

Calendars stay full. Weeks stay long. Strategy stays theoretical.

The business owners who answer it decisively are already operating at a different level.

And the longer others wait, the harder it will be to catch up.

Because this shift isn’t coming.

It’s already here.

New Publication – Advanced AI Prompting Guide for Microsoft Copilot

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https://directorcia.gumroad.com/l/aaiprompt

Advanced AI Prompting Guide for Microsoft Copilot

Unlock the true power of Microsoft 365 Copilot with the definitive guide to advanced AI prompting. Written for experienced Copilot users, this publication transforms your approach from basic instructions to strategic, collaborative conversations that deliver more accurate, efficient, and tailored results across Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams, and PowerPoint.

Why Buy This Guide?
  • Go Beyond Basics: Move past simple prompts and discover the game-changing concept of pull prompting. Learn how to shift Copilot from a passive tool to an active collaborator, improving accuracy by up to 20% for complex tasks and reducing trial-and-error cycles.

  • Practical, Real-World Examples: Step-by-step methods and worked examples for business, education, and software development. Application-specific techniques help you get the most out of Copilot in every Microsoft 365 app.

  • Prompt Templates & Checklists: Access a comprehensive library of prompt templates, quick-reference checklists, and decision matrices to streamline your workflow and boost productivity.

  • Build Custom Copilot Agents: For administrators and developers, learn how to design and deploy custom Copilot agents using structured system instructions in Copilot Studio—perfect for recurring, organisation-wide workflows.

  • Grounded in Microsoft Guidance: All techniques are based on Microsoft’s official recommendations and real-world practice, ensuring you’re always aligned with best practices.

Who Should Buy?
  • Microsoft 365 Copilot users ready to advance beyond basic prompting

  • Business professionals, educators, and developers seeking more consistent and powerful AI interactions

  • IT administrators and Copilot Studio builders wanting to create custom agents for their organisation

Key Features
  • Clear explanations of push vs. pull prompting, with actionable strategies for each

  • Application-specific guidance for Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams, and PowerPoint

  • Best practices, common pitfalls, and troubleshooting tips

  • Licensing and usage terms for personal and organisational use (see publication for details)


Elevate your AI skills and productivity—purchase the Advanced AI Prompting Guide and become a leader in intelligent collaboration with Microsoft 365 Copilot.

See all the titles available at – https://directorcia.gumroad.com/

Why Finding “Good Staff” Isn’t the Real Problem for MSPs

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Ask any MSP owner what’s holding their business back and you’ll usually hear the same answer within minutes: we can’t find good people. I hear it constantly. At events, on calls, in peer groups. It’s almost become an accepted truth of the industry.

But after years of running, advising, and working alongside MSPs, I don’t think the real issue is a lack of qualified staff. I think the real issue is that most MSPs are still trying to build modern businesses using hiring assumptions from ten or fifteen years ago.

The market has changed. The work has changed. The people have changed. Many MSPs haven’t.

The skills shortage isn’t going away – and waiting won’t help

The first uncomfortable truth is this: the talent shortage is not temporary. It’s not something that will “settle down next year” or magically fix itself once the economy shifts. Demand for technical capability keeps increasing, while the pool of people who want traditional MSP roles keeps shrinking.

Hoping things will improve is not a strategy. Building your business so it can survive and grow despite hiring challenges is.

MSPs that continue to rely on reactive hiring – scrambling to find someone every time workload spikes – will always feel understaffed, stressed, and fragile.

We need to stop obsessing over “perfect” candidates

One of the biggest self-inflicted wounds I see is MSPs defining “qualified” far too narrowly. They want someone with MSP experience, multiple certifications, deep technical skills, and great customer service – often for a role that offers limited growth and constant pressure.

That unicorn doesn’t exist. And if they do, they’re not applying for your job ad.

The better question isn’t “who already knows everything?” but “who can learn, adapt, and fit how we work?” Technical skills can be taught. Attitude, curiosity, and communication are much harder to fix.

Some of the best people I’ve seen in MSPs didn’t come from MSPs at all. They came from customer service, retail, internal IT, or completely different industries. What they had was the ability to think, listen, and improve.

If your entry-level roles burn people out, they’ll keep leaving

Let’s be blunt: many MSP help desk roles are miserable. High volume, constant interruptions, angry customers, little autonomy, and an unspoken expectation that people should “tough it out” before earning something better.

Then we act surprised when turnover is high.

If the only career path you offer is “suffer now, maybe get promoted later”, people will leave as soon as something better appears. And these days, something better appears very quickly.

MSPs that retain staff design roles people can actually stay in. They create visible career paths. Not everyone needs to become a senior engineer. Some people are brilliant at documentation, automation, service coordination, onboarding, or security operations. When those paths exist and are respected, retention improves dramatically.

Your biggest staffing risk is over-reliance on key individuals

Another hard truth: many MSPs don’t have a staffing problem, they have a dependency problem.

If only one or two people really understand how things work, your business is already in trouble. Every sick day, resignation, or holiday becomes a risk event. That’s not a people issue – that’s a design issue.

Standardisation fixes this. Documented processes, consistent tooling, repeatable builds, and automation reduce the amount of tribal knowledge locked in people’s heads. They also lower the experience barrier for new hires, making it easier to bring people up to speed without overwhelming your seniors.

Yes, standardisation takes time. But it pays back every single day after.

Automation isn’t about replacing staff – it’s about saving them

There’s still a strange fear in some MSPs that automation will make roles redundant. In reality, the opposite is true. Automation is often the only reason people don’t burn out.

When technicians spend their days resetting passwords, fixing the same problems, and running the same checks manually, they disengage. When those tasks are automated, their work becomes more interesting, more valuable, and more sustainable.

Automation allows smaller teams to do better work. It also makes MSP roles far more attractive to modern technicians who expect to work smarter, not harder.

Training isn’t a cost – it’s the price of retention

If you don’t invest in your people’s growth, someone else will. This is one of the simplest truths in the industry, yet it’s still treated as optional.

Training doesn’t need to be extravagant. What matters is intent and consistency. Protected learning time, clear expectations, mentoring, and internal knowledge sharing all signal that people matter beyond their billable hours.

People stay where they feel they are progressing. They leave where they feel stuck.

The goal isn’t more staff – it’s a more resilient MSP

The most successful MSPs I see aren’t the ones that hire fastest. They’re the ones that design their businesses to scale without breaking every time hiring gets hard.

They standardise aggressively. They automate deliberately. They hire for mindset, not résumés. They create roles people want to grow into, not escape from.

Finding qualified staff will probably always be challenging. But it doesn’t have to define your limits.

The real question MSPs should be asking isn’t “why can’t we find good people?”
It’s “why does our business fall apart unless we do?”

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.