People keep telling me AI is coming for the executive assistant. Every time, I think the same thing: you have no idea what this job actually is. AI can draft the email, book the flight, and summarize the meeting. Those are tasks. They were never the job. Here are five things no model can touch.
1. Read a room
Sensing that a meeting is about to go sideways, that a founder is running on empty, that now is not the moment to raise a hard topic. That read is human, and it drives better decisions than any calendar can.
2. Hold a relationship
Trust with a board member, a vendor, a difficult stakeholder, built over months of small, consistent interactions. AI can send the message. It cannot be the reason someone picks up the phone.
3. Make the judgment call
When the rules run out and two priorities collide, someone has to decide, own it, and be accountable. That is judgment, and it is the opposite of a rule an AI can follow.
4. Anticipate the unasked
Noticing what your executive will need before they ask, and having it ready. A tool responds to requests. A great assistant gets ahead of them.
5. Keep a confidence
Discretion with sensitive information, and the judgment to know what stays unsaid. That is trust, and it is earned, not configured.
The assistants who lean into these five are not threatened by AI. They use it to clear the busywork and spend their hours here, where the real value has always lived.