Routine is the real endangered species.
Every future-of-work headline warns of automation eating jobs. But look closer. What robots, AIs, and workflows are actually devouring isn’t employment itself, but routine...the predictable, repeatable rhythms that once defined work. That nine-to-five drumbeat of familiar tasks and settled roles? Automation is making it extinct, and with it, the certainty (and frankly, the boredom) of yesterday’s careers.
Forget the truly endless hype about robot overlords coming for your paycheque. The real story unfolding in Kiwi workplaces is the slow starvation of routine. Machines excel at rules, consistency, and endless repetition, all the things people claim to hate but often secretly rely on for a sense of structure and achievement. Now, automation is quietly vacuuming up scheduling, invoicing, data entry, and the script-following customer interactions that once filled hundreds of roles.
In their wake, what remains is “the messy stuff”. The work that cannot be codified, predicted, or cloned. Someone still needs to smooth ruffled feathers with clients, wrangle between departments, unravel surprises, sense when a project is veering off course, or invent a way to deliver value when procedure runs out.
This shift doesn’t spell doom. For the restless, creative, and collaborative, it’s a breath of fresh air. When routine tasks wither, space opens up for real human glue: empathising, troubleshooting, improvising, intervening, and making judgement calls when the map runs out and the compass is spinning.
Most articles out there seem to miss that the future isn’t about technical upskilling alone, but about being the kind of person or team who can navigate ambiguity, survive the curveball, create clarity from a fog of possibilities, and build bridges between people and systems.
What does that look like in action?
This is the human edge. Problems that don’t fit a template, and outcomes you can’t nail down on a project plan.
If you crave tidy job descriptions, stable routines, and clear boundaries, this era will feel uncomfortable. But the discomfort is not disaster. This is the opportunity that people have waited decades for. Those who get bored quickly, who love to tinker, who see shifting priorities as an adventure rather than a threat, finally have the field to themselves.
In the end, automation isn’t eliminating roles; it’s liberating them from monotony. The “security” of routine is being replaced by the thrill (and, yes, unpredictability) of real contribution.
This is not a call for ever-more-specialised skills lists. It’s a call for hiring and promoting people who are unstuck by uncertainty. Let go of old checklists. Design roles with room for judgement and improvisation, not just compliance.
The future of work in Aotearoa will be written by those who see the death of routine not as a threat but as a stage opening for creativity, empathy, and agility. For every role that “disappears,” three more will twist and grow into something new and unexpected. Routine is vanishing, but meaningful challenge is multiplying.
So don’t brace for layoffs. Get ready for liberation. We’re ready to figure out what only humans can do next.
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"One of Ant's strengths is relating to owners in a visionary sense and talking to people who are on the ground...[Ant has a] wide understanding of different systems, processes and applications and can articulate where we're going and what the possibilities are...working with Ant has changed the way we make decisions about IT structures and support systems."
We hired Ant to support us with an important project after he was highly recommended by colleagues. Ant was responsive, speedy, super-helpful and helped us to make key decisions. We appreciated his broad experience, and his ability to hold a high level strategic view alongside expert advice on details. We will definitely be consulting with Ant again and are happy to recommend him.
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Unlike outsourced IT providers who often operate without deep business knowledge, Target State acted as our strategic partner to ensure technology was purposefully aligned with our business goals, driving real value and growth.
Ant has a clear, no-nonsense approach to technology. He focuses on outcomes, not hype, and always keeps the business context front and centre. In a world full of AI buzzwords and distractions, he’s someone who brings clarity and direction.
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