Human skills vs technical skills: which one wins by 2035?

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Human Skills vs IT Skills: Preparing Students for Jobs That Will Exist in  2030 - LTSU

Pick the wrong skills to build now and you could spend years getting good at something a machine does for free by 2035.

That’s the real fear behind this question. Everyone’s trying to read the next 10 years and figure out where to put their effort.

The debate usually splits into two camps. One says learn to code, learn the tech, the future is technical. The other says machines will handle the technical stuff, so go human, go for the soft skills. Both are half right and half wrong.

Here’s the honest version.

What technical skills look like by 2035

Technical skills are the hard, learnable ones. Coding, data analysis, accounting, engineering, using specific software and tools.

For years these were the safe bet. Learn a hard skill, get a stable job, done. That logic held up for a long time.

Then AI got good at exactly this kind of work. It writes code, crunches data, drafts reports, and does it fast. So the value of pure technical skill is dropping in some areas, because the machine now does the routine version of it.

But that doesn’t kill technical skills. It changes what kind matters. The basic, repeatable technical work is the part AI eats first. The deep, complex technical judgment is the part that survives and pays more.

A coder who only writes simple scripts is in trouble. A coder who designs whole systems and knows why one approach beats another is fine. Same field, very different futures.

What human skills look like by 2035

Human skills are the ones AI struggles to fake. Communication, leadership, empathy, persuasion, reading a room, handling conflict, creative judgment.

These got more valuable the second AI got good at the technical stuff. When the machine handles the calculation, the human work becomes the parts the machine can’t touch.

Think about what’s left when AI does the heavy lifting. Someone still has to decide what to build and why. Someone has to manage the team, calm the angry client, and make the call when the data is unclear. Someone has to bring taste and judgment that a model can’t.

That’s all human work. And it’s hard to automate because it runs on understanding people, not processing data.

The catch is that human skills feel soft and fuzzy, so people skip building them on purpose. That’s a mistake, because they’re getting rarer and more wanted at the same time.

So which one wins?

Neither, on its own. The winner by 2035 is the person who has both.

This is the part both camps get wrong. It was never a choice between technical and human. The strongest position is the overlap, where you understand the tech and you’re good with people.

Picture two people in 2035. One is a brilliant engineer who can’t explain an idea or work in a team. The other understands the engineering well enough to direct it, and can lead, sell, and communicate. The second person runs the room. Every time.

The pure technical person becomes a tool the company uses. The person who pairs technical understanding with human skill becomes the one who decides how that tool gets used. That’s where the money and the safety sit.

So the answer isn’t picking a side. It’s refusing to.

Why the combo is so powerful

A technical skill alone makes you useful. A human skill alone makes you likeable. Together, they make you hard to replace.

Here’s why. AI is shrinking the gap between people on raw technical output. When everyone has the same AI tools, the technical floor rises for everybody, and pure technical skill stops setting you apart.

What sets you apart then is the human layer on top. The judgment to use the tech well. The communication to explain it. The leadership to point it somewhere useful.

A marketer who understands the data and can tell a story with it beats a pure analyst and a pure storyteller both. A doctor who knows the medicine and actually connects with patients beats one who knows only the medicine. The pattern holds across nearly every field.

The combination is the whole game by 2035.

How to build both, starting now

You don’t have to master everything. You need enough technical depth to be credible and strong human skills on top.

On the technical side, go deep in one area, not shallow in 10. Pick a field, learn it properly, and stay current as the tools change. The goal is to understand your area well enough to direct AI, not compete with it on speed.

On the human side, stop treating these as things you either have or don’t. Communication improves with practice. Leadership grows when you actually lead something, even a small project. Empathy and persuasion sharpen the more you work with people instead of around them.

Then connect the two. Be the technical person who can present. Be the people person who actually understands the tech. That overlap is rare, and rare is what pays.

Figuring out where you stand on both sides is hard from the inside, because the skills you’ve got feel ordinary to you. A set of free career guidance tools can read your experience and show you which skills you’re strong in, where the gaps are, and what’s worth building next. Quick way to see your real starting point.

And if you want to know which directions actually hold up, this breakdown of in 2035 which job is best is worth a read before you commit.

Don’t bet on one side

The people who struggle by 2035 will be the ones who went all-in on a single type of skill and ignored the other half.

The pure techie who can’t communicate. The pure people person who doesn’t understand the tools their field now runs on. Both get squeezed.

The safe move is to build a bridge between the two. Get good enough at the technical side to be taken seriously, and good enough at the human side to lead, sell, and connect. That mix has survived every wave of technology so far, and it’ll survive this one too.

Start now, while you’ve got time to build both. Ten years sounds far away. It isn’t, and the people getting ready today are the ones who’ll be glad they did.

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