Is Your Job at Risk? How AI Is Turning the Corporate Pyramid Upside Down
Forbes2 weeks ago
940

Is Your Job at Risk? How AI Is Turning the Corporate Pyramid Upside Down

CAREER DEVELOPMENT
ai
career
management
automation
workforce
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Summary:

  • Companies are cutting entry-level jobs and middle managers, risking an upside-down corporate structure due to AI automation.

  • Entry-level job postings have fallen by 30% recently, threatening the leadership pipeline and organizational resilience.

  • Middle management roles are declining by over 40%, but they are crucial for strategy execution and human judgment in AI-driven workplaces.

  • A pentagon-shaped workforce model is proposed to balance AI integration with stable entry, capable middle, and strategic top layers.

  • AI reshapes work but cannot replace human capabilities like judgment, conflict resolution, and context-rich decision-making.

Organizational chart with removed roles highlighting entry-level and middle-management cuts.

Companies are cutting entry-level roles and middle managers, reshaping the structure of the workforce.

As the AI revolution barrels through boardrooms and onto org charts, companies are beginning to redraw their workforce for the age of automation. But in the process, many are shaping the future incorrectly. For decades, organizations relied on the corporate pyramid: a broad base of entry-level roles, a narrower band of middle managers, and a tight strategic top. Now, with AI reshaping organizational structure and accelerating a trend toward flatter hierarchies, many companies are in danger of turning that pyramid upside down.

Two shifts are driving this inversion: the sharp decline in entry-level opportunities and the widespread disappearance of middle managers. Together, they point to a deeper question at the heart of the future of work. What happens when AI automates the tasks but organizations dismantle the layers that build capability and judgment?

The Decline of Entry-Level Jobs

Across industries, companies are pulling back from early-career hiring at a scale that would have been unthinkable even five years ago. LinkedIn data shows that entry-level job postings fell roughly thirty percent from early 2024 to early 2025, following a twenty-three percent decline since 2020. The slowdown spans sectors that traditionally hire large graduate cohorts, including finance, tech, media, and law.

These fields are also among the most exposed to generative AI, yet evidence suggests that economic forces, not AI alone, have driven the early hiring slowdown. Still, anxieties are rising. As Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has warned, we may be "sleepwalking into mass unemployment," with up to half of entry-level knowledge work potentially automatable within five years.

Against this backdrop, many leaders now treat early-career roles as optional. If automation can summarize content, clean data, triage customer questions, and draft documents, why staff these functions with junior employees?

Viewed narrowly, the logic holds. Viewed strategically, it is a fundamental error. Entry-level roles are the on-ramp into organizational life. They build institutional memory, judgment, and the leadership pipeline. When companies shrink the base, they narrow their future capacity.

Organizations optimizing solely for task efficiency risk losing capability resilience.

The Disappearance of Middle Managers

At the same time, a second structural shift is accelerating: the decline of middle management. The rise of AI has made it fashionable to question whether managers are even necessary. At Meta, Mark Zuckerberg dismissed entire layers of supervisors as "managers managing managers managing managers." Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has said he "hates bureaucracy" as the company increased worker-to-manager ratios by double digits.

The data reflects this trend. Revelio Labs shows job postings for middle managers have fallen more than forty percent since 2022. Gartner predicts that through 2026, one in five companies will use AI to flatten organizational structures and eliminate more than half of current middle-management roles. This flattening is no longer limited to tech; retailers, financial institutions, and professional services firms have adopted similar approaches, cutting layers to reduce cost and increase speed.

But the conclusion that managers are obsolete is misguided. Deloitte’s 2025 Global Human Capital Trends report highlights what managers actually do once the administrative tasks are stripped away. They coach people, develop skills, mediate conflict, guide judgment calls, sense when something is off, and translate strategy into action. They provide clarity when environments are volatile, and they create connection when change overwhelms teams. They anchor meaning, context, and cohesion.

In an AI-driven organization, the need for these capabilities does not disappear. It intensifies. The middle is where strategy becomes execution, where teams navigate complexity, and where new workflows, tasks, and responsibilities emerge. Even the most advanced AI systems cannot replicate human judgment, escalation, conflict resolution, or context-rich decision-making.

When companies cut both the bottom and the middle, they create brittle structures that struggle to adapt and break under pressure. AI may change the work, but without the people who reshape roles and redesign workflows, organizations cannot function.

It is time for a more balanced architecture.

A New Workforce Architecture for the AI Era

If cutting entry-level jobs and cutting middle management pushes the traditional corporate pyramid toward an upside-down shape, Beamery’s Inside the Human–Machine Economy report offers a more balanced alternative. The report introduces the idea of a pentagon-shaped workforce, a structure designed to prevent exactly this kind of collapse.

Instead of a workforce hollowed out at the bottom and middle, the pentagon framing highlights three stabilizing layers: a stable entry layer where early-career employees can build the judgment and context AI cannot provide, a capability-rich middle that drives execution, collaboration, and mobility, and a sharper strategic apex focused on system-level decisions.

In this model, AI does not erase layers. It reshapes the work each layer holds. And redesigning that work cannot happen from the outside. It must come from the people closest to the tasks, the ones who understand how work actually gets done and where judgment, nuance, and human connection matter. AI may take on execution, but only humans can determine what matters, how value is created, and what makes one organization different from another.

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