IBM 将入门级职位数量增加三倍,原因是发现人工智能采用的局限性。
IBM tripling entry-level jobs after finding the limits of AI adoption

原始链接: https://fortune.com/2026/02/13/tech-giant-ibm-tripling-gen-z-entry-level-hiring-according-to-chro-rewriting-jobs-ai-era/

## Z世代与不断变化的就业市场 尽管就业市场面临挑战,应届大学毕业生失业率高达5.6%,且担心人工智能会取代入门级职位,但一些大型公司出人意料地*增加*了Z世代的招聘。例如,IBM正在将入门级招聘**增加三倍**,认为投资年轻人才对未来的成功至关重要。 这种转变认识到,虽然人工智能可以自动化常规任务,但它也*需要*一支掌握利用和与这些技术互动技能的劳动力。IBM正在重新设计职位——工程师专注于客户互动,人力资源管理人工智能聊天机器人——以培养持久的技能和长期价值。 Dropbox和Cognizant等其他公司也表达了类似的观点,指出Z世代对人工智能的自然流畅度超过了老一辈。他们正在扩大实习和毕业生项目,以利用这一优势。专家警告说,为了短期收益而削减入门级职位可能会导致未来管理人员短缺和更高的招聘成本,并提倡人力资源领导者继续投资年轻人才。虽然IBM宣布了裁员以及增加了招聘,但预计美国整体员工人数将保持稳定,这表明战略重点发生了转变,而不是减少机会。

## IBM 增加初级职位招聘,源于对人工智能的现实评估 IBM 将其初级职位招聘人数增加三倍,据报道这源于发现人工智能在完全自动化任务方面的局限性。此举表明战略转变,认识到在技术变革期间持续需要人类员工——特别是年轻员工。 Hacker News 上的讨论指出,增加的招聘可能集中在咨询职位上,可能表明其他公司不愿投资于容易受到人工智能影响的初级全职职位。人们对美国初级咨询费用的竞争力表示担忧。 初级工作的性质也在不断演变;员工不再直接回答问题,而是专注于*纠正*人工智能聊天机器人的输出并确保准确性。这反映了人类对人工智能生成内容进行监督和验证的趋势。 一些评论员对 IBM 的决策表示怀疑,引用了其过去的表现和正在进行的年龄歧视诉讼。另一些人指出,IBM 招聘网站上目前列出的初级职位数量相对较少。
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原文

The job market has been a sore subject for Gen Z. The unemployment rate among young college grads sits at 5.6%, hovering near its highest level in more than a decade outside the pandemic. Meanwhile, prominent executives—from Anthropic’s Dario Amodei to Ford’s Jim Farley—have warned that artificial intelligence will slash corporate entry-level jobs. 

But some companies are realizing that cutting young workers out of the pipeline isn’t a sustainable long-term strategy: $240 billion tech giant IBM just revealed it’s ramping up hiring of Gen Z.

“The companies three to five years from now that are going to be the most successful are those companies that doubled down on entry-level hiring in this environment,” Nickle LaMoreaux, IBM’s chief human resources officer, said this week. 

“We are tripling our entry-level hiring, and yes, that is for software developers and all these jobs we’re being told AI can do.”

While she admitted that many of the responsibilities that previously defined entry-level jobs can now be automated, IBM has since rewritten its roles across sectors to account for AI fluency. For example, software engineers will spend less time on routine coding—and more on interacting with customers, and HR staffers will work more on intervening with chatbots, rather than having to answer every question.

The shift, LaMoreaux said, builds more durable skills for workers while creating greater long-term value for the company.

With job market conditions likely to stay tight for young candidates in 2026, applicants who show initiative and comfort with AI may be the ones who break through at companies like IBM. According to LinkedIn, AI literacy is now the fastest-growing skill in the U.S.

Cutting entry-level talent could backfire in the long term, according to IBM’s HR head

As AI increases pressure on companies to be leaner and more productive, early-career hiring has often looked like the simplest place to cut. A report from Korn Ferry found that 37% of organizations plan to replace early career roles with AI.

But while that strategy might be helpful with short-term financials, LaMoreaux argued, it could cause havoc in the future.

Reducing junior headcount risks creating an eventual shortage of mid-level managers. Attempting to poach talent from competitors is likely to be costlier, and outside hires tend to take longer to adapt to internal systems and culture.

That’s why, she said, HR leaders need to push back.

“Entry-level hires—it is your responsibility to make the case for that,” she said. “Build the business case now; even though it may not seem so obvious to your leaders, because AI is going to make your job easier three years from now.”

IBM CEO Arvind Krishna has already heard LaMoreaux’s plea and rejected the idea that AI should translate into fewer opportunities for graduates.

“People are talking about either layoffs or freezing hiring, but I actually want to say that we are the opposite,” Krishna told CNN in October. “I expect we are probably going to hire more people out of college over the next 12 months than we have in the past few years, so you’re going to see that.”

Just a week after his comments, however, IBM announced it would cut thousands of workers by the end of the year as it shifts focus to high-growth software and AI areas. A company spokesperson told Fortune at the time that the round of layoffs would impact a relatively low single-digit percentage of the company’s global workforce, and when combined with new hiring, would leave IBM’s U.S. headcount roughly flat.

Fortune reached out to IBM for further comment.

Like IBM, some tech companies are rethinking talent pipelines—and embracing Gen Z

IBM isn’t alone in betting that younger workers may actually accelerate AI adoption. In fact, according to Melanie Rosenwasser, chief people officer at Dropbox, Gen Z are actually coming to work equipped with better AI skills than their older peers.

“It’s like they’re biking in the Tour de France and the rest of us still have training wheels,” Rosenwasser told Bloomberg. “Honestly, that’s how much they’re lapping us in proficiency.”

The file-sharing company is set to expand its internship and new graduate programs by 25% to capitalize on the AI fluency of younger workers.

Ravi Kumar S, CEO of IT firm Cognizant, similarly told Fortune last year that he would be creating more entry-level jobs owing to his bullish view of Gen Z.

“So many companies have a pyramid with the bottom where school graduates are. That pyramid is going to be broader and shorter, and the path to expertise is going to be faster,” he said.

“This year, we are hiring more school graduates than ever before. I can take a school graduate and give them the tooling so they can actually punch above their weight. AI is an amplifier of human potential. It’s not a displacement strategy.”

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