AI is not the threat to your career. The threat is the attorney down the street, the consultant across town, or the professional sitting two floors below you who has already figured out how to make AI work for them. That person is not smarter than you. They may or may not have more experience. What they have is a willingness to adapt, and in competitive professions, that willingness is currently worth more than almost anything else on a résumé.
The conversation about AI in professional services has been dominated by fear, but that fear is largely misdirected. The model that replaces the judgment of a lawyer or a seasoned professional does not exist. What does exist is a professional who can now do in two hours what used to take eight and have time left to actually think about strategy. That person is not being replaced by a machine — they are being made dramatically more valuable by one. The professional who refuses to engage with that reality is not protecting their craft. They are simply making themselves easier to pass over.
In the legal world specifically, there is an obligation that goes beyond self-interest. Clients hire attorneys because they expect competence, and competence in this moment includes understanding the tools that are reshaping how legal work gets done. Billing six hours for research that an AI-assisted attorney could complete in ninety minutes is not a sustainable model, and clients are beginning to understand that. The attorneys who will thrive are the ones who use AI to sharpen their judgment, accelerate their output, and deliver better work at a price point that reflects the reality of the market. The ones who cling to the inefficiencies of the past will be billing for time, which is not the same thing as delivering value.
This requires the same thing that every meaningful shift in professional life has always required: curiosity, a willingness to be a beginner again, and the discipline to actually put in the time to learn something new. The attorneys and professionals who built successful careers did it by adapting to new areas of law, to new client demands, to new market conditions. AI is not a departure from that pattern. It is the latest version of it. The only question worth asking right now is whether you are going to be the person who integrates it and pulls ahead, or the person who watches someone else do it and wonders what happened.
As always, this post and others can be found on my blog, Business Law Guy.