After implementing AI for all employees at our company, we discovered that the value created by each person using the tools varied. Some saw productivity increase by 10%, others by 10%, and still others had no idea what code they had written two months prior, becoming a negative value in the system. Ever since Ford invented the production line, the meaning of human work has been to improve overall efficiency and productivity through refined division of labor. However, today, AI tools have already made many people obsolete. And remember, this is only the second year of AI adoption, and no one can guarantee that they won't become a negative value in a few years. Most jobs will become dispensable, like the supermarket ticket seller, book editor, or production inspector we see today. So, what kind of work can still create value? Creating unique experiences, generating data that can't be digitized, and integrating knowledge from multiple disciplines. The biggest difference between humans and AI is our mortality, and the desires that arise from this fear of death—both a human weakness and the only thing AI can't understand about us.