Skip to main content
Paul Welty, PhD AI, WORK, AND STAYING HUMAN

· artificial-intelligence · found

Bookmark: Klarna CEO says the company stopped hiring a year ago because AI ‘’can already do all of the jobs

Klarna's CEO reveals how AI's capabilities halted hiring, challenging traditional job models and reshaping the future of work in fintech.

In a fascinating insight from Business Insider, Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski discusses how AI could potentially replace human labor, leading the fintech company to halt hiring. The idea that AI “can already do all the jobs” challenges traditional workforce models. And as someone keenly interested in tech-forward solutions, I find it intriguing how Klarna plans to navigate this AI-driven future. This piece sheds light on the dynamic interplay between innovation and employment.

“Siemiatkowski said AI ‘can already do all of the jobs that we as humans do.’” Klarna CEO says the company stopped hiring a year ago because AI ‘can already do all of the jobs’

Why customer tools are organized wrong

This article reveals a fundamental flaw in how customer support tools are designed—organizing by interaction type instead of by customer—and explains why this fragmentation wastes time and obscures the full picture you need to help users effectively.

Infrastructure shapes thought

The tools you build determine what kinds of thinking become possible. On infrastructure, friction, and building deliberately for thought rather than just throughput.

Server-side dashboard architecture: Why moving data fetching off the browser changes everything

How choosing server-side rendering solved security, CORS, and credential management problems I didn't know I had.

The work of being available now

A book on AI, judgment, and staying human at work.

The practice of work in progress

Practical essays on how work actually gets done.

The inbox nobody reads is the one that matters

Every organization has a monitoring system that works perfectly and reports to nobody. The gap between having information and acting on it is where most failures actually live.

The best customers are the first ones you turn against

Every subscription makes a bet that most customers won't use what they're paying for. The customer who closes that gap becomes a problem to be managed.

Delegation without comprehension is just prayer

The organizations that survive won't be the ones that automated the most. They'll be the ones that figured out what to stop delegating.

Bookmark: GenAI comes for jobs once considered ‘safe’ from automation

Generative AI is reshaping secure jobs in education, finance, and ICT, creating both challenges and opportunities for adaptation in urban areas.

Bookmark: CEO says he hasn’t hired anyone in a year as he replaces human workers with AI

Klarna's CEO reveals a bold shift to AI, reducing staff by 22% in a year while boosting productivity. Explore the future of work and technology's impact.

Bookmark: Mastercard exec wants companies to reskill workers before AI comes for their jobs

Mastercard's exec urges businesses to prioritize reskilling workers to prepare for the AI revolution and safeguard jobs.