Sean Heuer
Contributor

IT operations career paths in the age of AI

Opinion
Sep 18, 20257 mins

Forget the old IT ladder — AI is speeding up careers for those ready to adapt, blending tech know-how with strategy and people skills.

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Credit: Getty Images

Artificial intelligence is changing the fabric of enterprise IT. For years, IT operations teams defined their careers by deep technical mastery in system administration, service desk troubleshooting and so forth. But as AI takes root in day-to-day IT, the ‘traditional’ rungs of the career ladder are shapeshifting. Roles built on repetitive, manual work are shrinking, while new opportunities are opening up for leaders who can guide strategy, governance and integration.

The question many IT professionals are asking themselves now is simple: What does a career in IT operations look like right now in the age of AI?

Fewer entry points, but faster growth opportunities

Historically, IT operations has been an accessible entry point for folks looking to break into the tech sector. Help desk roles, system monitoring and junior administration jobs offered people opportunities to learn on the job, then gradually move up to more advanced engineering or architecture positions. But AI is rapidly absorbing much of the repetitive work that defined these starting roles, which means this paradigm is shifting.

This doesn’t mean the career path is closing, though. It means the rungs are being rearranged. Entry-level hiring may taper, but professionals who bring baseline technical skills and the ability to manage AI-assisted tools will find themselves advancing more quickly. The trajectory is shifting from “years of manual grind” to “faster elevation into oversight and design roles.”

Forward-looking organizations are already rethinking their pipelines. Instead of hiring large numbers of entry-level support staff, they are focusing on candidates who can quickly adapt, learn multiple systems and take ownership of AI-assisted workflows. For early-career professionals, that means certifications, continuous learning and cross-functional exposure matter more than clocking years of work in the same static role.

The rise of hybrid technologists

One emerging pattern is the hybridization of IT careers. AI tools shift emphasis without eliminating the need for human operators. Future IT operations leaders will be less defined by how quickly they can execute manual fixes and more by how well they can:

  • Interpret AI-generated recommendations and make judgment calls.
  • Build guardrails for responsible AI use.
  • Partner with developers, business leaders and compliance teams to align technology with outcomes.

In practice, this creates a new class of “hybrid technologists” who straddle an enterprise’s technical and business domains. Skills like communication, governance and cross-functional collaboration become as important as depth in a single technology stack.

The most successful professionals will be those who can travel between worlds. They might explain the nuances of AI-driven observability to a business executive in plain language, then pivot to collaborate with engineers on improving model performance. These bridge builders will find themselves in high demand, because they can provide hands-on AI work while also conveying the importance of that work to other stakeholders and business units!

New specialties are emerging

As AI takes on more tactical work, entirely new specialties are developing within IT operations. Some of the most prominent include:

  • AI governance specialists who ensure that systems are auditable, ethical and compliant with regulatory standards.
  • Data operations engineers who manage the quality, availability and integration of the data that fuels AI-driven systems.
  • IT architects who design career paths and skillsets that determine how AI integrates with monitoring, observability and service management tools.
  • Experience owners who focus on employee and customer experience, measuring how AI impacts productivity and satisfaction.

Other emerging roles may not even carry traditional IT titles. For instance, companies are experimenting with “AI reliability engineers” who blend SRE responsibilities with model monitoring, or “A ethicists” tasked with evaluating algorithmic decisions’ downstream impacts. These roles may not have existed five years ago, but they’re becoming the center of gravity for IT operations careers over the next decade.

For IT professionals considering long-term growth, the key is to look for spaces for roles that combine technical know-how with judgment, policy or design. Those are the functions least likely to be automated away and the most likely to accelerate in importance.

Leadership is being redefined

For CIOs and senior IT leaders, career progression is no longer only about budget stewardship or uptime metrics. In the age of AI, leadership requires comfort with ambiguity and, again, an ability to bridge multiple disciplines.

Future IT leaders will need to answer questions like:

  • How do we measure the value of AI in operations?
  • Where should humans remain in the loop?
  • Which skills should we cultivate to prepare our workforce for constant change?

Leaders who can guide their organizations through this transition will be rewarded with influence far beyond IT. AI has forced technology into the center of business strategy, and IT leaders who can articulate the opportunities and risks will find themselves with a stronger voice in the boardroom.

This is already visible in how CIO reporting lines are changing. Increasingly, CIOs are reporting directly to CEOs, reflecting technology’s role as a driver of growth and resilience. Career advancement into the C-suite will depend less on infrastructure expertise and more on vision, diplomacy and the ability to build coalitions across the business.

For individuals building careers in IT operations, the best strategy is to lean into adaptability. Technical expertise remains critical, but the differentiators will be skills that complement AI: critical thinking, communication and the ability to design systems that align with business outcomes.

Upskilling will become a continuous requirement, too. Courses in cloud management, cybersecurity and data analysis are already common, but professionals should now add AI governance, ethics and design to their portfolios. Just as importantly, mentoring and shadowing opportunities should focus not only on tools but also on how to evaluate risk, balance trade-offs and communicate recommendations clearly.

For CIOs, the challenge is to rethink talent development. Traditional apprenticeship models may fade as AI absorbs entry-level work, so leaders will need to create new pathways for developing future experts. Rotations across business units, project-based leadership opportunities and investment in soft skills will prepare employees to step into hybrid roles. Career progression will become less about climbing one narrow ladder and more about building breadth across adjacent domains.

The bottom line

There’s a lot of fear in the market about AI eliminating jobs, but in IT, it’s reshaping them. The roles of the future will demand fewer repetitive tasks and more oversight, integration and leadership. For professionals, this means faster access to meaningful work and the chance to grow into hybrid technologists and cross-functional leaders. For organizations, it means cultivating a workforce that is strategic, adaptable and equipped to guide AI responsibly.

The ladder may look different, but it still leads upward. And for those ready to adapt, the age of AI will open more doors in IT operations than it closes.

This article is published as part of the Foundry Expert Contributor Network.
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Sean Heuer

Sean Heuer is the CEO of Resolve Systems, a global leader in intelligent IT automation and orchestration. With a background in digital transformation and infrastructure modernization, Sean works closely with CIOs and IT leaders to help them operationalize automation at scale. He also writes about enterprise IT, digital transformation and the ever-evolving skills that CIOs and I&O leaders need to succeed.

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