06/11/2026
AI is a tool, not a replacement for skilled labor.
One of the biggest mistakes we continue to make as a society is assuming technological advancement automatically makes skilled labor obsolete.
History already showed us what happens when we think that way.
When the West Virginia coal industry started to decline in the mid-to late 2010's, entire communities lost the industries they had built generations around. Thousands of miners were suddenly without work. These were not unskilled workers. Modern mining required technical expertise, problem-solving ability, machinery knowledge, precision, and experience that had been passed down over decades.
The response, backed by federal grants and heavily endorsed by politicians, was to retrain coal miners for coding and IT jobs. On paper, it sounded innovative. Programs promised to turn Appalachia into “Silicon Holler” and positioned software development as the future replacement for mining jobs.
But many of those programs failed under operational strain and unfulfilled promises. One of the most publicized organizations, Mined Minds, eventually faced a class-action lawsuit from unemployed miners who alleged the training was inadequate and that promised paid apprenticeships and tech job placements never materialized.
Not because miners lacked intelligence or work ethic, but because communities built around skilled, hands-on labor were suddenly being pushed into entirely different industries with little local infrastructure to support them.
You cannot simply erase generations of applied knowledge and expect communities to seamlessly transition overnight.
And that lesson matters today.
AI will absolutely change how businesses operate. We can see that it already has changed the way we operate day-to-day.
It can improve communication, planning, administration, documentation, scheduling, and efficiency.
But AI still cannot replace craftsmanship, field experience, leadership, adaptability, or the practical knowledge skilled laborers develop over years in the real world.
The future is not AI instead of skilled labor. The future is AI used alongside skilled labor to make experienced professionals even more effective.
The companies that succeed over the next decade will not be the ones trying to eliminate human expertise.
They’ll be the ones that understand technology works best when it strengthens people, not when it tries to replace them.
How do you use AI alongside your skilled labor?