AI is Forcing Entry-Level Candidates to Bring Senior-Level Skills, PwC Finds
The traditional entry-level job is undergoing a massive transformation. According to a new analysis by PwC, artificial intelligence is fundamentally reshaping the junior job market, pushing employers to demand senior-level competencies from candidates who are just starting their careers.
The findings come from PwC’s 2026 AI Jobs Barometer, released on June 15, which examined over 1 billion job advertisements worldwide. When zooming in on 2.4 million entry-level positions in the US, the data revealed a stark shift: entry-level roles in AI-exposed fields are now seven times more likely to require "traditionally senior" skills than they were in 2019.
These newly expected competencies for junior staff include emotional intelligence, strategic judgment, motivational leadership, team building, stakeholder and process management, mentorship, and data-driven decision-making.
PwC defined a "traditionally senior" skill as one that appeared more than 50 times in experienced, high-AI-exposure job postings in 2019, but fewer than five times in entry-level postings for similar roles that same year.
"The good news is that many junior workers will be spared years of drudgery on basic, repetitive tasks," PwC noted in the report. "The tough news is that those same workers need to quickly step up to demonstrate skills like leadership and strategic thinking."
**The End of the "Grunt Work" Era**
The driving force behind this shift is AI’s growing ability to handle the repetitive, data-heavy tasks that historically formed the foundation of junior white-collar roles. Because AI can now do the "grunt work," the overall volume of entry-level hiring has slowed.
Globally, the barometer found that the number of entry-level roles highly exposed to AI has completely flatlined. Major firms are feeling the squeeze; as previously reported by Business Insider, PwC itself plans to cut its entry-level hiring in the US by a third over three years.
However, the US data offers a silver lining for roles that have adapted to the new reality. Entry-level jobs in AI-exposed fields that were "seniorized"—meaning they added more than 10 traditionally senior skills to their requirements—actually grew by 35% between 2019 and 2025. Conversely, comparable entry-level roles that failed to update their skill requirements shrank by 10%.
**Overhauling Corporate Training**
The rapidly changing nature of junior work is forcing companies to rethink how they train and develop young talent.
In February, PwC US rolled out a new workplace training initiative designed to help younger employees adapt. As part of this restructuring, the firm consolidated the locations where its entry-level consultants work, shrinking the footprint from 72 offices down to just 13.
Yolanda Seals-Coffield, Chief People and Inclusion Officer for PwC US, explained that the combination of remote-work isolation during the pandemic and the rapid integration of AI has fractured the traditional learning and development experience for younger staff. By centralizing offices and revamping training, the firm hopes to rebuild that sense of connection and ensure the next generation of workers can successfully navigate an AI-driven landscape.
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