OBSERVED IN REAL USE · Anthropic 2026
8%
of this role’s work is already showing up in real Claude usage (Anthropic Economic Index).
Mostly fireproof. AI hands you the paperwork and steps back.
27% of this role’s O*NET tasks are within reach of today’s AI. That is the core-weighted exposure score from Eloundou et al. 2023 (“GPTs are GPTs”). It measures a capability ceiling, not a headcount forecast. Mostly safe. AI helps around the edges, but the job stays human.
WHAT AI CAN ALREADY DO
- Develop ideas for creating dances, keeping notes and sketches to record influences
- Choose the music, sound effects, or spoken narrative to accompany a dance
- Seek influences from other art forms, such as theatre, the visual arts, and architecture
- Design dances for individual dancers, dance companies, musical theatre, opera, fashion shows, film, television productions, and special events, and for dancers ranging from beginners to professionals
- Coordinate production music with music directors
WHAT IT STILL CAN’T
- Direct rehearsals to instruct dancers in dance steps and in techniques to achieve desired effects
- Teach students, dancers, and other performers about rhythm and interpretive movement
- Advise dancers on standing and moving properly, teaching correct dance techniques to help prevent injuries
- Experiment with different types of dancers, steps, dances, and placements, testing ideas informally to get feedback from dancers
- Train, exercise, and attend dance classes to maintain high levels of technical proficiency, physical ability, and physical fitness
THE HONEST PART. A percentage is not a pink slip. High exposure usually means a role shrinks and shifts toward judgment, direction and responsibility: the parts a model can’t sign its name to. Exposure ≠ displacement. Breathe.
"My job is 27% cooked. What’s yours?"
SOURCES: O*NET 30.3 occupational tasks · Eloundou et al. 2023 (“GPTs are GPTs”,
arXiv:2303.10130) · Anthropic Economic Index 2026 (CC-BY) |
how this is calculated |
last updated 2026-07-16