The Death of Entry-Level Jobs May Create a Workforce Crisis Nobody Is Ready For
Sometime last week, I came across a tweet. It is that kind of tweet that sits with you for a while and decides to live in your head rent-free.
The person posted that junior roles are quietly being replaced by AI, and that in five years, companies are going to look around and wonder why there is nobody experienced enough to fill senior positions.
It wasn’t a lengthy thread or sparked a heated debate. It was just one of those very calm, very unsettling observations that somehow found its way to thousands of people, and then found its way to me.
What Is Actually Happening Right Now
Companies are not announcing that they are killing entry-level jobs; they are just not replacing them.
A hiring freeze here, a restructuring there, and suddenly the graduate trainee programme that used to onboard fifty people a year is down to ten, then five, then maybe a LinkedIn post about "operational efficiency."
AI tools handle tasks like drafting emails, summarising documents, running first-pass research, generating reports that used to belong to junior staff.
If you look from the perspective of the company, it makes a lot of sense. Why pay a 23-year-old to do something a tool can do in four seconds for a fraction of the cost?
However, what this logic misses is that the 23-year-old was not just doing the task — they were learning how to do the job.
The Pipeline Nobody Is Talking About
Every senior professional you admire was, at some point, terrible at their job.
They were mid-level before they were senior, and they were junior before they were mid-level, and the whole climb happened because someone gave them work to fumble through and figure out.
That fumbling does not reflect inefficiency, but rather, it is how expertise gets built inside a human being.
When you cut the bottom layer of the ladder, you do eliminate the process by which senior staff are eventually made.
Five years from now, a company that stopped hiring entry-level talent in 2024 is going to post a job for a Senior Product Manager with seven years of experience and find that the pool is dangerously shallow.
The talent pipeline does not refill itself.
Why Africa Should Be Paying Closer Attention
The continent has the youngest population in the world, and the majority of that population is entering a job market that is quietly closing its entry points.
Across the continent, graduate unemployment was already a structural crisis before AI entered the conversation.
Now the conversation has changed, and a lot of young Africans are still responding to a job market that no longer quite exists in the shape they were taught to expect.
The degree, the internship, the entry-level application and the old sequence is breaking down, and nobody in charge is saying so clearly enough.
So What Do You Actually Do
The honest answer is that the transition requires something more uncomfortable than a new skill. It requires a repositioning of how you present your value.
AI is taking the execution. What it cannot replicate is judgment, context and the ability to work with people who are difficult and complicated and human.
Young professionals who learn to direct AI tools rather than compete with them are going to look very different on a shortlist. You are building a working knowledge of the tools in your industry and documenting what you have done with them.
Specialisation is also becoming more valuable. The generalist entry-level role is the most replaceable thing in the market right now, but the person who knows one domain deeply enough to catch what AI gets wrong is not going anywhere.
Community and visibility matter more than a CV at this point. The opportunities that are still moving are moving through networks, so your presence in the right conversations is a career strategy now, not a vanity project.
And perhaps most importantly, treat adjacent skills as leverage. For example, a journalist who understands data, a marketer who can read a balance sheet, a designer who speaks about products are harder to automate because they exist at intersections that AI has not cleanly mapped yet.
The Real Crisis
The crisis is not that AI is getting smarter. The crisis is that the institutions responsible for thinking about the future of work are moving at a pace that has no relationship to how fast the ground is shifting.
Young Africans cannot afford to wait for those institutions to catch up.
The entry-level job may be dying, but the people who understand why and move accordingly are going to be the ones still standing when companies go looking for the senior talent they forgot to grow.
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