Former Delivery Drivers Are Getting Weird New Jobs as Delivery Robots Take Over
"They are the kind of jobs that scale with the robots."
As autonomous delivery robots roll onto California sidewalks, a new kind of gig job is emerging in their wake: the "robot wrangler."
These workers, employed by companies like Coco and Serve Robotics, serve as the unseen support system for fleets of delivery bots. When a robot gets stuck in a pothole, tips over on uneven pavement, or encounters an unexpected obstacle like a garden hose or construction zone, it's the wrangler who responds—freeing the machine, righting it, or carrying it back to base for repairs.
Much of this labor happens off-camera: daily battery swaps, software updates, sensor cleaning, and hardware troubleshooting. But a significant portion plays out on public streets, where America's often-fragmented urban infrastructure poses constant challenges for machines still learning to navigate the real world. Wranglers help robots cross busy intersections, and sometimes even complete the final handoff when customers decline to meet the bot at the curb.
"We hire people whose roles scale directly with the fleet," a Serve Robotics executive told the *Los Angeles Times*. "More robots mean more humans needed to operate and maintain them."
Yet for many human delivery drivers, these new roles underscore a deeper anxiety: that automation isn't creating opportunity—it's replacing it. While robot wrangler positions do exist, they represent a narrow slice of the workforce displaced by the technology they maintain.
In Los Angeles, Coco's job postings for "Robot Delivery Specialists" describe a hybrid role: transporting bots to partner merchants, performing basic repairs, and stepping in for in-person deliveries when the machines can't complete the job. Pay ranges from $21 to $23 per hour—translating to roughly $45,760 annually for full-time work.
That figure may exceed what some independent gig drivers earn, but it still falls significantly short of California's estimated living wage for a single adult with no dependents: $63,402, according to MIT's Living Wage Calculator.
More fundamentally, the rise of delivery robots threatens to erase one of the few low-barrier income sources available to workers with limited options. Gig delivery has long functioned as a financial lifeline for marginalized communities—migrants, single parents, older adults, and people with disabilities—who rely on its flexibility and minimal entry requirements.
If platforms like Uber Eats and DoorDash have already "deskilled" driving by reducing workers to algorithm-managed task-completers, robots may represent the next stage: reducing human labor to remote troubleshooting and emergency intervention. Unlike gig drivers, who can log off an app and end their work obligation, hourly-contracted wranglers remain tethered to fleet demands with little autonomy over their time or tasks.
The long-term employment impact of delivery robots remains uncertain. The technology is still in early commercial deployment, and city-level regulations—from sidewalk access rules to safety mandates—could significantly slow adoption. But at this inflection point, a critical question demands attention: Are autonomous delivery systems a step toward shared economic progress, or simply Silicon Valley's latest strategy to reduce labor costs while branding exploitation as innovation?
