Why staying ahead of AI trends is crucial for career growth?

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In many workplaces today, there is a quiet split forming that has nothing to do with job titles or years of experience. On one side are people who treat artificial intelligence as a passing trend, something optional that can be ignored until their company forces a training on them. On the other side are those who are already experimenting, building small habits around AI tools, shaving hours off repetitive work, and slowly redesigning how they deliver value. From the outside, it looks like everyone is equally overwhelmed by AI news and buzzwords. From the inside, the gap between these two groups is widening in ways that directly affect career growth, reputation, and future opportunities.

As a founder turned mentor, I do not see AI as magic and I do not see it as a monster that will replace everyone. I see it as a leverage filter. It reveals who is willing to re learn how they create value, even when it feels uncomfortable or unfamiliar. That mindset is what builds durable careers. AI just happens to be the current spotlight that exposes it. For a long time, careers were built around relatively stable skills and processes. You learned a software suite, a reporting format, a sales script, and you could ride that knowledge for years. Today the half life of many skills is getting shorter. A marketer who insists on writing all copy manually is not competing with AI itself. They are competing with another marketer who uses AI to generate multiple drafts in minutes, tests variations faster, and spends more of their energy on strategy, positioning, and customer understanding. A junior analyst who still does manual data cleaning in spreadsheets is not only slower. They are also less available to ask better questions of the data, because their energy is consumed by repetitive tasks that AI can already handle at a reasonable baseline.

This does not mean that core skills have suddenly become unimportant. Taste, judgment, ethics, and domain expertise are still the foundation. What is shifting is the way those skills are expressed in daily work. Staying ahead of AI trends is essentially about staying alert to how your role is being reshaped by new tools, so you can adjust your workflow before someone else redesigns your job for you. If you wait until a formal HR program appears, you are already behind. By the time a company launches a big AI initiative with official training and new policies, the people who experimented early often become the informal experts, the ones asked to lead pilots or design the very programs everyone else attends.

In almost every team, one person eventually becomes the quiet AI translator. This person is not always the most senior. Often it is a mid level operator, a product manager, or a team lead who gets curious, tries new tools after work, and then shows up with a better process. They might build a simple workflow that turns rough meeting notes into client ready emails. They might use AI to summarise customer interviews so the team can focus on insights instead of transcription. They might draft job descriptions and interview questions in half the time and free their manager to focus on hiring decisions instead of paperwork.

At first, these are small productivity tricks that save a few hours here and there. Over time, they signal something much more important to leadership. This is someone who does not just execute tasks. This is someone who redesigns how work gets done. That is when career growth speeds up. You shift from being seen as “the person who handles the workload” to “the person who improves the system”. In challenging markets, especially in regions like Southeast Asia and the Gulf where businesses are under pressure to modernize quickly, that kind of person becomes very valuable, very fast.

The real career risk is not that AI will arrive one morning and instantly remove your job. The deeper risk is that your mindset stays static while your environment evolves. When that happens, you become one of those employees that every founder secretly worries about. Loyal, hardworking, but stuck in an older mode of operating that no longer fits what customers need. You can see this friction clearly whenever AI comes up in meetings. One group gets defensive and says things like “our clients will never accept that” or “this only works in the US, not here”. Another group leans in and asks, “What if we test this on low risk tasks first” or “Which part of our workflow is most repetitive and could be a safe experiment”.

The topic is the same, but the posture is completely different. One group waits for certainty and permission. The other group is willing to explore controlled risk. In fast moving industries, the second group always compounds faster. They get first access to new responsibilities, experimental projects, and even roles that did not exist a year ago. They also build a reputation for being adaptable without being reckless, curious without being distracted. Quietly, when companies start to reorganize around AI supported workflows, leaders look for people in that second group to protect, retain, and promote.

The good news is that staying ahead of AI trends does not require you to read every research paper or sign up to every new product launch. Chasing every headline usually leads to anxiety and shallow knowledge. A more sustainable approach is to build a simple system for yourself built on curiosity, practicality, and visibility. Curiosity means looking beyond the hype and asking, on a regular basis, how AI is changing the way your industry creates value. Maybe sales teams in your sector are using AI to personalise outreach and shorten cycles. Maybe media teams are now measured more on strategy and distribution because drafting basic content has become easier. You do not need perfect predictions. You just need to notice the direction of change.

Practicality means grounding that awareness in your daily work. Instead of trying to transform everything at once, you pick one or two friction points in your week and ask how AI could help. You might start by using AI to draft first versions of emails, proposals, or reports. You might use it to structure research, create outlines, or do basic data analysis. The goal is not to shout that you are “using AI”. The goal is to remove drudgery and free up time for deeper work.

Visibility means sharing what you learn in a way that genuinely helps others. You might tell your teammates, “I tried this tool for our client follow ups. It saved us time but we still needed to adjust the opening. Here is the prompt that got closest.” You might document your experiments in a short internal note or show a before and after example during a team meeting. Over time, people start to associate your name with practical improvements rather than abstract ideas.

From a leadership perspective, this kind of behaviour is a strong signal. When boards and founders look for future leaders, they are not only evaluating technical excellence. They are also looking for people who can navigate ambiguity, guide others through change, and turn new tools into real outcomes without burning the team out. AI sits right at this intersection. If you can help colleagues move from fear to useful experiments, you are already exercising change leadership. If you can translate AI trends into language that finance, operations, marketing, and product teams can understand, you are already practicing cross functional influence. If you can set clear boundaries for responsible use and hold to them, you are demonstrating judgment. These qualities are exactly what people look for when deciding who should lead a new region, own a new product line, or represent the company in emerging areas. AI fluency is not just about knowing a set of tools. It has become a visible proof that you can adapt, communicate across functions, and design systems around new realities. That is why staying ahead of AI trends has such a strong impact on long term career growth.

If all of this sounds intimidating and you feel late to the game, it is important to remember that you do not have to catch up overnight. The worst response is paralysis. The best response is to start small and treat AI as a weekly practice rather than a one time crash course. Begin by listing the parts of your work that feel the most draining or repetitive. Then pick one task and commit to using AI for that task first, for the next month, before falling back to manual effort. Maybe it will be drafting emails. Maybe it will be summarising documents. Maybe it will be outlining presentations. The point is not perfection. The point is to train yourself to reach for leverage before you reach for more hours. As you get more comfortable, you can stack more use cases, refine your prompts, and share your discoveries. Eventually you shift from being a passive observer of AI trends to an active shaper of how they show up in your organisation. Along the way, remember that you still have agency. Tools will keep changing. Hype cycles will rise and fall. What matters most is your ability to evaluate what is useful, push back when something is all buzz and no value, and keep your focus on what genuinely serves your customers, your team, and your own standards.

Every generation faces a technological shift that forces people to rebuild their playbooks. For us, AI is that shift. You do not need to become an engineer or turn your role into nothing but prompting. You do, however, need to avoid clinging to old habits when better options appear right in front of you. Staying ahead of AI trends is really about staying ahead of your own resistance. It asks you to notice your discomfort, turn it into curiosity, and then channel that curiosity into small, concrete experiments that improve how you work.

Over time, these personal experiments accumulate into something larger than a set of tricks. They become part of your professional identity. You become the founder, manager, or teammate that others call when the next big shift shows up, because they trust that you will not panic or complain. You will listen, learn, test, and find the leverage hidden in the change. That is what makes careers grow in turbulent times. Not perfect forecasts. Not endless hustle. Just a consistent choice to learn early, apply what you learn practically, and bring others along with you.


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