Walk into a hotel on Fort Lauderdale Beach today and you might not notice it right away, but artificial intelligence is already shaping your stay. A virtual concierge suggests a dinner reservation before you even think to ask. Staffing schedules adjust automatically based on projected guest counts. Energy systems quietly save the property thousands while keeping your room perfectly chilled. Just a few blocks away, a new condo tower along Las Olas is being marketed not just for its ocean views but for its “AI-powered smart living.” And in offices from Coral Springs to Miami, small business owners are turning to generative AI to write ad copy, analyze sales trends, and even find their next customer.
That’s the local snapshot—but it’s part of a much bigger picture. Around the world, AI is rewriting the rules of work. Goldman Sachs estimates that 6 to 7 percent of U.S. jobs could be displaced as AI takes hold, while the International Monetary Fund says nearly 40 percent of jobs globally will be affected in some way. The catch? It isn’t all bad news. The same Goldman Sachs report points to productivity gains of up to 15 percent, which could fuel new jobs and whole new categories of work. The World Economic Forum predicts AI could actually create a net gain of 2 million jobs worldwide in the coming years. And PwC found wages in AI-heavy industries rising twice as fast as in others—a sign that the right skills are already commanding a premium.
Of course, the transition won’t be painless. A Stanford study found that young workers in AI-exposed industries—think customer service and entry-level tech—have seen a 13 percent drop in employment since 2022. Researchers called them the “canaries in the coal mine.” And while some executives dream about replacing junior staff with AI, Amazon Web Services CEO Adam Selipsky didn’t mince words: “Replacing junior employees with AI is the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard.” His point? Entry-level jobs build the foundation for future leaders—and AI should enhance, not erase, that pathway.
Which brings us back to South Florida. In hospitality, AI can anticipate what a guest wants before they ask—but it can’t replace the warmth of a bartender who remembers your name. In real estate, algorithms can model pricing with remarkable precision, but buyers still rely on brokers they trust. Even in small businesses, surveys show that while 60 percent of Florida entrepreneurs are adopting AI for marketing or operations, 82 percent of those companies have actually grown their headcount. The lesson is clear: here, as elsewhere, the human touch still matters.
South Florida is positioning itself to take advantage. Florida legislators have already proposed a statewide study to understand how AI is reshaping wages and workforce needs. Broward College, with its track record in workforce training and micro-credentialing, is building programs to help workers transition into AI-adjacent fields—from healthcare and logistics to finance and creative services. The region’s mix of tourism, real estate, and entrepreneurship makes it uniquely positioned to showcase what an AI-enabled economy looks like—without losing sight of the people who power it.
So yes, AI is global. It’s changing industries from Shanghai to Silicon Valley. But it’s also right here on Las Olas, on Fort Lauderdale Beach, and in small offices across Miami-Dade. The future of work isn’t man versus machine—it’s about how South Florida businesses embrace AI as a partner, and how quickly our workforce can adapt. The technology may be written in code, but the story of how it plays out will be told right here, in the communities that make this region thrive.













