How Many People Do Repeatable Tasks, and What Percent Can Be Automated with AI?

The Automation Reality

Far more people do repeatable tasks than most organisations realise — and far less can be fully automated than most AI headlines claim. The nuanced reality is more interesting and more actionable than either extreme suggests.

The Global Picture

  • McKinsey (2025): 60% of occupations have at least 30% automatable activities
  • WEF (2025): 44% of workers’ core skills will be disrupted by AI in 5 years
  • OECD: 14% of jobs are highly automatable; 32% will change significantly
  • European Commission: 14% of EU jobs at high risk; 32% at medium risk

What “Automatable” Actually Means

Most “automatable” tasks don’t disappear — they transform:

  • Full automation: Data entry, routine reporting, simple categorization (~10% of tasks)
  • AI augmentation: Research, drafting, analysis — human + AI working together (~40% of tasks)
  • AI-resistant: Complex judgment, creative synthesis, interpersonal work (~50% of tasks)

European-Specific Considerations

European automation faces additional dynamics:

  • Works council requirements in Germany, Netherlands — union involvement in AI deployment
  • Worker protection regulations — redundancy consultation requirements
  • Higher average wages in Western Europe make automation ROI calculations more favorable
  • EU AI Act high-risk classification for AI in employment — additional compliance burden

Practical Framework for European Companies

For identifying automation opportunities:

  1. Map tasks by frequency and rule-boundedness
  2. Calculate true cost of repetition (time × cost × error rate)
  3. Identify AI tools that match the task (don’t over-engineer)
  4. Design human-AI handoffs for non-routine exceptions
  5. Measure impact quarterly and iterate
📊 Data-Driven

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