The title "executive assistant" has not changed since 2019. The job hiding behind it completely has. If you are building your career or hiring for the role, the skill stack is what to look at.
The 2019 baseline
The core used to be calendar, inbox, travel, minutes, and gatekeeping. All of that is still needed. The shift is that it is now the baseline, not the edge, table stakes rather than a differentiator.
The 2026 edge
The assistants getting hired and paid the most have added a second layer on top of the baseline:
- Automation. Removing repetitive work with no-code tools, so the routine runs itself.
- AI prompting. Getting reliable, on-voice output from tools like ChatGPT and Claude, with the judgment to verify it.
- Data and reporting. Turning activity into dashboards and clean numbers leadership can act on.
- Systems thinking. Designing the process, not just executing steps inside it.
The market is already voting
This is not a hunch. Executive assistant job posts asking for AI skills rose more than seventy percent in a single year, and AI-fluent admins command a real wage premium. AI fluency has quietly moved from a nice-to-have on a resume to the new baseline.
How to build the stack
You do not need all four edge skills at once. Pick one this quarter and compound from there. Depth beats dabbling, so go one tool at a time and actually get good at it before adding the next. The good news is that the bar is still low enough to clear quickly; one solid automation or one reliable prompt habit already puts you ahead of most of the field.
The field is shrinking at the bottom and growing at the top. The whole game is deciding which end you are building toward.