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By Ed Frauenheim
Posted on ZDNet News: Mar 11, 2005 11:33:00 PM

"Offpeopling" may be the latest turn of phrase to describe job trends, and it's the focus of a blog launched Friday.

Consultant Richard Samson argues that the replacement of human workers by technology is a bigger deal than the much-publicized offshore trend. And he's turned to the increasingly popular Web log, or blog, medium to share his views.

Dubbed "Automatic Abundance," the blog is slated to provide alerts on topics such as tasks that are shifting to machines, income opportunities that are relatively safe from automation and emerging business ideas consistent with the trend.

"It's happening every day, right before our eyes, but few notice," Samson said in a statement Friday. "A child born today will find very few of today's jobs in the want ads when graduating from college. Most work tasks done now by people will be done by smart technology within 20 or 30 years."

According to the EraNova Institute consulting organization Samson directs, he coined the term "offpeopling" several months ago. But he's not the first to predict the end of work as we know it. Such concerns surfaced during the Industrial Revolution as factory machinery replaced workers, and more recently, authors have published books with titles such as "The Jobless Future."

In the information technology world in particular, the argument has been making the rounds. Last year, an analyst at research firm Gartner predicted that over the next 20 years, changes in computing technology will erase the need for much of the work that employs IT workers today.

By comparison, more attention has been paid in the past few years to offshoring--the shift of high-skilled work such as computer programming from the United States to lower-wage nations like India. The scope and effects of the offshoring trend, however, have been hard to pin down.

Samson is confident that technology is the larger issue. He argues that automatic systems have eliminated most jobs in farming, helped cut manufacturing to less than 17 percent of the nonagricultural work force and are now displacing white-collar workers such as bank tellers. "Offpeopling has much more impact than offshoring or outsourcing," he said. "Yet it's not in the headlines or on TV."

Computers and the like elbowing humans aside isn't necessarily a bad thing, according to Mountain Lakes, N.J.-based EraNova. In fact, it imagines such a change resulting in people shifting to new kinds of work based on their interests rather than on economic necessity.

But if people don't pay attention to the trend, offpeopling could be bad for individuals and the public, Samson suggests. "Those who listen in will avoid huge mistakes and ride the trend to opportunities others will miss," he said in an inaugural blog posting. "Stay tuned."

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  • Most Recent of 34 Talkback(s)
er.. .60 ... not 6.00
That dog food should have been 60 cents a can. Can't edit these messages after the fact. (Read the rest)
Posted by: maxo_z Posted on: 03/15/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
MCDonalds is even entering the outsourcing game  JasonL31 | 03/11/05
Automation reduces potential errors.  B.O.F.H. | 03/12/05
I've made this point for years.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/12/05
It's not that new  IT_User | 03/13/05
Hmmm, yes and no...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/13/05
Its called Malthusian Economics...  Dave F_z | 03/13/05
Or WAR!!! Why create a whole new source when we can  Laff | 03/13/05
Growth industries  Roger Ramjet | 03/14/05
Butt don't all those jobs you listed depend on an economic  Laff | 03/14/05
Interrelationships  Roger Ramjet | 03/14/05
Not true, all of them are declining.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/14/05
Here's where I'd direct a youth today  voska | 03/14/05
Sorry but no...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/14/05
Rise of the Machines  osreinstall | 03/14/05
And the flip side - people OUGHT to work terrible worthless mind numbing  quietLee | 03/14/05
Were you trying to make a point?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/14/05
For the sake of argument....  maxo_z | 03/15/05
er.. .60 ... not 6.00  maxo_z | 03/15/05
In some sense I.T. has been about this  Mark Miller | 03/12/05
I would also like to see a 30 hour work week.  DonnieBoy | 03/13/05
Nope....like IT the future for maintaining automation  Laff | 03/13/05
You know if it ever got to that point  voska | 03/14/05
Seems I remember a story about a man who was working  Laff | 03/13/05
Some jobs but not all  Chad_z | 03/12/05
There is what we hope, and then there is REALITY or what is  Laff | 03/13/05
I heard this same thing when I was a kid  voska | 03/14/05
Even if that is true I do not know if that will remain so.  Laff | 03/14/05
You need to know where the real economy is  voska | 03/14/05
3 to 4 hundred years!?! Seriously?  Laff | 03/14/05
Greed will prevent it  voska | 03/14/05
When all is said and done...I am but a cog iin the machine  Laff | 03/14/05
As long as we're talking some day.  Anton Philidor | 03/14/05
Both are smaller than diminished innovation  MyLord | 03/14/05
Okay what gives.  IT Scion | 03/14/05

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