I got tired of the "AI will replace everyone" vs. "AI is just a tool" debate so I pulled actual DFW employment data. Here is what is actually happening on the ground.
Jobs where DFW postings are DOWN since 2024:
- Content writing / copywriting: -34% in postings on Indeed for DFW metro. Source: Indeed Hiring Lab.
- Junior graphic design: -28%. Senior roles are flat.
- Data entry / administrative assistants: -22%.
- Customer service (non-phone): -19%. Chatbots are replacing tier 1 support.
- Basic financial analysis: -15%. AI can generate reports that junior analysts used to spend days on.
Jobs where DFW postings are UP:
- AI/ML engineers: +67%. Every company wants to "integrate AI."
- Prompt engineers / AI operations: +120% (from a small base, but the trend is real).
- Cybersecurity: +31%. AI creates new attack surfaces.
- Skilled trades (HVAC, plumbing, electrical): +18%. Robots cannot fix your AC in a Texas summer.
- Healthcare (nurses, PAs, therapists): +14%. Cannot automate human touch.
The nuance nobody talks about: AI is not replacing jobs wholesale. It is replacing TASKS within jobs. A marketing manager who used to manage a team of 3 copywriters now manages AI tools and one editor. The manager's job still exists. The junior copywriter roles do not.
DFW-specific impact:
- North Texas is a major corporate HQ hub (AT&T, CBRE, Deloitte, Goldman Sachs operations). These companies are aggressively adopting AI for back-office functions.
- The DFW tech corridor (Richardson, Plano, Frisco) is hiring AI talent at Silicon Valley salaries. Source: Levels.fyi DFW data.
- Blue-collar DFW jobs are largely insulated. Construction, logistics, and skilled trades are booming.
Sources:
- Indeed Hiring Lab — DFW metro job posting trends 2024-2026
- Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Employment data
- Levels.fyi — DFW tech compensation data
- LinkedIn Economic Graph — DFW skills demand
The answer is not "yes AI will take your job" or "no it won't." The answer is: it depends on what you do and whether you adapt.
Sound off in the comments.
The real story is the bifurcation. Tech workers who learn AI tools are earning more than ever. Those who refuse to learn are getting squeezed. There is no middle ground anymore.