27/04/2026
The Rise of the Invisible Staff
Why the Future of Work Is Changing Faster Than Ever
A quiet revolution is taking place around us.
It is not happening with loud announcements or dramatic headlines alone. It is happening silently in offices, schools, banks, hospitals, and companies across the world.
This revolution is the rise of what many are calling "The Invisible Staff", artificial intelligence systems, automation software, digital assistants, and algorithms that can now perform tasks once done entirely by humans.
And the numbers tell a story every parent and student needs to hear.
The Numbers Are Staggering
This is not speculation. The data is already here.
The World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report 2025, drawing on surveys of over 1,000 employers representing more than 14 million workers worldwide, projects that 92 million roles will be displaced by 2030, while 170 million new roles emerge, a net gain of 78 million jobs.
But here is the part most people miss: the disruption is happening right now, not in some distant future.
Between January and June 2025 alone, companies reported 77,999 tech job cuts directly connected to AI adoption, the equivalent of hundreds of people losing their jobs every single day.
Goldman Sachs estimates that 300 million full-time jobs globally could be partially or fully automated. Meanwhile, McKinsey estimates that 60% of all occupations have at least 30% of their tasks automatable today.
Perhaps most striking of all: McKinsey's research estimates that today's existing technology, not future AI, but what exists right now, could theoretically automate approximately 57% of current U.S. work hours.
What Is Happening Right Here in Malaysia
This is not just a Western problem.
Malaysia's Ministry of Human Resources has confirmed that the rise of automation and AI has led to job losses for 293,639 workers since 2020. The manufacturing sector was hardest hit, accounting for 75,615 layoffs. Other badly affected sectors include wholesale and retail trade (43,614 losses), professional and scientific services (23,907), and ICT (19,931).
The pace is accelerating. In the first quarter of 2026 alone, 24,100 Malaysians were retrenched, a surge of 47% compared to the same period in 2025.
And looking ahead, AI-driven automation could displace 600,000 Malaysian jobs by 2028, IT Brief Asia, unless the workforce adapts.
What do Malaysian workers themselves think? According to the Ipsos AI Monitor 2025, 63% of adults in Malaysia believe AI will replace their current job within the next five years. At the same time, warnings from the government suggest that 4.5 million Malaysians could lose their jobs in the wake of AI, prompting calls to retrain 50% of the country's workforce.
Even Teachers Are Not Immune
For generations, people believed teaching was one of the safest professions. Today, that assumption is being challenged.
AI can now generate lesson plans in seconds, mark assignments automatically, personalise revision for every student, tutor 24 hours a day, and produce educational videos and quizzes on demand.
Analysis by McKinsey reveals that the education sector faces a 6% exposure rate to AI-driven job displacement, lower than administration (26%) or customer service (20%), but not zero.
This does not mean teachers will disappear entirely. But it does mean the role of teachers is changing. The future teacher will not survive by simply delivering information, because AI can deliver information faster, cheaper, and more consistently.
The teachers who thrive will be those who do what machines cannot: inspire, mentor, build relationships, develop character, and coach human creativity.
The Real Risk Is Not AI Taking Jobs
The real risk is this: people who refuse to adapt being replaced by people who use AI well.
The same WEF research found that 41% of employers globally plan to reduce their workforce in areas where AI can automate tasks within the next five years. ALM Corp Critically though, AI-related job postings are now 134% above 2020 levels, meaning the demand for people who can work with AI is surging at the same time.
History teaches us this pattern clearly. The industrial revolution did not eliminate work, it eliminated outdated work. The internet did not eliminate business; it eliminated businesses that refused to digitise. AI will do the same.
What This Means for Students Today
Among all high-risk roles, customer service representatives face an 80% automation rate, and data entry clerks face 7.5 million job eliminations by 2027. SSRN Many of the entry-level jobs that graduates have traditionally stepped into first are disappearing fastest.
Wall Street banks alone plan to remove approximately 200,000 jobs over the next three to five years, particularly in entry-level and back-office roles.
But AI does not eliminate work equally; what it eliminates is tolerance for average performance.
The children who succeed will develop:
1. Adaptability: the ability to learn new tools quickly
2. Creativity: reactivity and arts roles show just a 4% vulnerability to automation, according to SQ Magazine, suggesting that original thinking remains deeply human
3. Communication, the ability to influence, persuade, and connect
4. Leadership and management positions are the least threatened by AI, at just 3% risk, because leadership and strategic oversight remain highly human-dependent
5. Entrepreneurial Thinking, the ability to create opportunities rather than wait for them
What Parents Must Understand
Parents can no longer prepare children only for exams.
Among young adults aged 18 to 24, 52% already worry that AI will negatively impact their future careers. Younger workers are 129% more likely to fear job loss from AI than older workers.
Their fear is not irrational. But fear without action is dangerous.
The world is shifting, from memorisation to application, from qualifications to capability, from working hard to working smart with technology. Right now, one in three Malaysians has never used AI at work, exposing a critical skills gap that students cannot afford to inherit.
A straight-A student who lacks adaptability may struggle in this future economy. Meanwhile, a student with average grades but exceptional creativity, digital fluency, and initiative may thrive.
The invisible staff is already here. They do not ask for salaries. They do not take breaks. They work 24 hours a day. And every year, they get smarter.
By 2030, AI is projected to help generate 170 million new jobs worldwide, but only for those with the skills to fill them.
The question is no longer whether AI will change the workforce. It already has.
The question is: Will our children be prepared to compete with it, lead it, and use it? Or will they be replaced by those who can?
At EdQuest, we believe education must evolve with the world. Because we are not preparing students for the past.
We are preparing them for the future.
Sources: World Economic Forum Future of Jobs Report 2025 · Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research · McKinsey Global Institute · Malaysia Ministry of Human Resources · Ipsos AI Monitor 2025 · Forbes · HLIB Research