Find Your Path
What do you want to be?
Not sure yet? Totally normal! Just browse around and find what catches your eye!
55 career guides
3-5 role models in each guide
Content Creator
A content creator is someone who makes their own stories out of video, images, writing, and audio, releases them onto the internet, and makes a living by building relationships with the people who watch. It's basically running a one-person media company — handling planning, shooting, editing, talent management, and marketing all by yourself. That's both terrifying and irresistible.
What you'll learn
Data Scientist
A data scientist is the person who digs through a messy pile of data to answer the question, 'So… what should we actually do?' They blend statistics, coding, and business sense to predict the future and help people make better decisions. It's one of the fastest-changing jobs in the AI era, which makes it even more fascinating.
What you'll learn
Researcher
A researcher is someone who grabs hold of a question nobody has answered yet, forms a hypothesis, tests it through experiments, and adds brand-new knowledge to the world. New drugs, new materials, AI models, the secrets of the universe—it's the job of turning today's 'I don't know' into tomorrow's 'I know.' And right now, when AI is cranking up the speed of research like crazy, it's a more exciting path than ever.
What you'll learn
Teacher
A teacher is someone who helps students learn new things, think for themselves, and grow. Beyond designing lessons, teaching, and giving feedback—it's a job that can change the entire direction of a person's life. In an age where AI is taking over 'delivering information,' let's look together at where a teacher's real value is moving to.
What you'll learn
AI Security Engineer
AI Security Engineers find and defend against vulnerabilities in LLM and AI systems. With Anthropic Mythos discovering 271 Firefox vulnerabilities in 2026, this role — combining traditional security engineering with LLM agent capabilities — is the fastest-growing cybersecurity specialization.
What you'll learn
Software Engineer
Software Engineering is being reshaped by AI — from AI/ML and agentic systems to LLM inference-cost, AI-infrastructure, and AI-output-verification engineering. These are the fastest-growing, highest-premium specializations for software engineers in 2026.
What you'll learn
Content Sales Agent
A Content Sales Agent licenses films, dramas, and content IP to global distributors, OTT platforms, and broadcasters. They negotiate deals at markets like Cannes and Berlin, structure rights agreements, and are the reason K-content reaches 124 countries simultaneously.
What you'll learn
Entrepreneur
An entrepreneur finds a real-world problem or opportunity and builds a new business—often from scratch—to solve it through a product, service, or better process.
What you'll learn
Marketing Manager
A Marketing Manager plans and leads campaigns that tell a company’s story, attract the right customers, and turn attention into sales using creativity, data, and teamwork.
What you'll learn
Attorney
An attorney helps people, businesses, or governments solve legal disputes, protect rights, and navigate laws through research, documents, negotiation, and courtroom advocacy.
What you'll learn
Medical Doctor
A Medical Doctor diagnoses illnesses and injuries, treats patients with plans like medicines or surgery, and teaches people how to stay healthy while working with healthcare teams and keeping detailed records.
What you'll learn
Management Consultant
A Management Consultant diagnoses business problems by analyzing operations and data, then designs and helps implement strategies that improve performance and growth.
What you'll learn
Investment Banker
An investment banker helps companies raise money by selling stocks or bonds and advises on major deals like IPOs, mergers and acquisitions, and restructurings.
What you'll learn
Product Manager
A Product Manager identifies real customer needs, builds a product roadmap, and guides cross-functional teams from idea to launch while measuring and improving results over time.
What you'll learn
UX Designer
A UX Designer researches real users and turns insights into wireframes and prototypes so digital products feel intuitive, fast, and enjoyable to use.
What you'll learn
AI Drug Discovery Researcher: Where Machine Learning Meets the Lab Bench
Researchers who wire protein and molecule foundation models into the wet lab — AlphaFold-lineage structure prediction, generative molecular design, and cheminformatics, all looped into experiments to find drug candidates faster.
What you'll learn
AI Adoption & Enablement Trainer: A New Role for Corporate Educators
A corporate trainer who teaches employees to wire AI agents into real workflows and owns adoption — the new role for when deployment, not model power, is the bottleneck.
What you'll learn
AI Education Policy Specialist: A New Role for Teachers
An educator who vets edtech AI tools, designs AI-literacy curricula, and advises on classroom AI governance. As 'full-scale rollout is a gamble' becomes the public debate, the job of verifying and owning that call is opening up.
What you'll learn
AI Alignment Research: A New Frontier for AI Security Engineers
A career guide to AI alignment research, where philosophy and ethics meet machine learning to keep frontier models pointed at what humans actually want.
What you'll learn
Physical AI Security: The Engineer Who Defends Robots
Physical AI security engineers stop attacks on robots, autonomous vehicles, and embedded AI hardware — defending firmware, ROS/DDS, and wireless provisioning so a hack never becomes a physical hazard.
What you'll learn
AI Hiring Fairness Auditing: A New Frontier for AI Security Engineers
Auditing AI hiring systems for bias and algorithmic monoculture is a new career. Stanford HAI exposed the discrimination risk that creates the demand.
What you'll learn
Agent Data Leakage Prevention Engineer
A defensive AI security specialization focused on building guardrails, context isolation, and output DLP that stop autonomous LLM agents from leaking the secrets they were entrusted with.
What you'll learn
Agent Governance: The AI Security Engineer's Control Plane
Agent governance is the new AI security specialization for controlling autonomous agents in production.
What you'll learn
AI Red Team Specialist
Career guide for AI Red Team Specialists who evaluate LLM and AI systems from an attacker's perspective, combining automated tools (XBOW, ZeroPath, Garak) with manual analysis to find vulnerabilities.
What you'll learn
Forward Deployed Engineering: A New Specialization for Software Engineers
Engineers embedded inside customers to make enterprise AI actually ship. Pioneered by Palantir, institutionalized by OpenAI, Anthropic, and Amazon.
What you'll learn
Self-Improving Agent Ops: A New Frontier for Software Engineers
Runs self-improving agents in production—held-out gating and capability-regression detection make autonomous change safe and reversible.
What you'll learn
Agent Reliability Engineering: A New Frontier for Software Engineers
Engineers who stop instructions from bleeding between modules in prompt-composed agent systems. Module isolation, instruction scoping, interference eval harnesses, and runtime guards that make production agents trustworthy.
What you'll learn
Chip Design & EDA Engineering: Working Sub-1nm Silicon Through Software
As process nodes fall below 1nm, demand surges for software engineers who handle chip design automation and verification. The career between silicon and code that IBM's 0.7nm reveal made visible.
What you'll learn
Inference Silicon Co-Design: The Software Engineer Between the Model and the Chip
Inference silicon co-design engineers fuse ML models with custom accelerators, co-designing chip and compiler for efficiency.
What you'll learn
LLM Reasoning Evaluation: A New Frontier for Software Engineers
LLM reasoning evaluation engineers judge whether a model reasons soundly, not just whether the final answer is right. Eval design is splitting off into its own role.
What you'll learn
Long-Horizon Agent Orchestration: A New Frontier for Software Engineers
Engineers who tame coding agents that run autonomously for hours. Harness design, checkpointing, drift guards, cost controls, and human-in-the-loop resumption — the role where the longer the agent runs, the more the human matters.
What you'll learn
Privacy & Trust-Safety Engineering: The Roles the 'Papers, Please' Internet Created
Age and identity verification mandates spreading worldwide are exploding demand for engineers who build privacy-preserving verification. A look at the trust-safety engineering career path.
What you'll learn
Agent-Native Tooling: A New Frontier for Software Engineers
Engineers who build developer tools whose primary user is an LLM agent, not a human. MCP servers, agent observability, and CLIs redesigned for the agent era — where the center of gravity in dev experience is shifting.
What you'll learn
Browser ML Infrastructure: A New Frontier for Software Engineers
Browser ML infrastructure engineers run real models on the client, no server required. WebGPU and Transformers.js turned private, offline inference into a hiring category.
What you'll learn
Open-Weight Image Model Engineer: The Software Engineer Who Owns the Diffusion Stack
When a 12B image model ships with open weights, the moat moves to whoever can fine-tune it for a domain and serve it fast. That engineer owns the diffusion stack — base, LoRA, and inference.
What you'll learn
The Junior Engineer in the AI Era: A Software Engineer's Survival Strategy for the Broken Entry Ladder
As AI shakes the first rung of the career ladder, here's how entry-level engineers survive by becoming AI-augmented. The path runs through verification and systems thinking, not raw typing speed.
What you'll learn
AI Platform Engineer: The Software Engineer Driving Enterprise-Wide AI Rollout
As enterprises deploy ChatGPT and Codex to every employee, demand is surging for engineers who build the internal AI platform and own its governance, cost, and adoption.
What you'll learn
AI-Augmented Engineer: The Software Engineer Who Directs the Agents
The AI-Augmented Engineer designs and directs coding agents and verifies their output. With 40% of 2026 layoffs citing AI, the judgment to direct agents outlasts the hands that type the code.
What you'll learn
LLM Serving Systems Engineer: The Software Engineer Who Makes GPUs Fast
The LLM serving systems engineer wields inference engines like vLLM and TensorRT-LLM to push 2–4x more throughput from the same GPU. PagedAttention, speculative decoding, and prefill/decode disaggregation are the tools that cut cost per token.
What you'll learn
AI Systems Efficiency Engineer: The New Software Engineering Specialization
Engineers specializing in LLM API cost optimization, token efficiency, and context management. As Glean's $300M ARR growth demonstrates, AI efficiency demand has made this a critical and fast-growing specialization.
What you'll learn
AI Coding Agent Adoption Engineer
AI Coding Agent Adoption Engineer: a specialist who evaluates, integrates, and governs autonomous AI coding agents (Devin, Claude Code, GitHub Copilot Workspace) within engineering organizations. Signaled by Cognition's $26B valuation as the next layer of enterprise developer productivity.
What you'll learn
Fintech Compliance Engineering: A Software Engineer's Specialization in Regulatory Technology
Tightening financial regulations — from prediction market bans to crypto oversight — are driving explosive demand for RegTech engineers who can automate compliance at scale.
What you'll learn
AI Infrastructure Engineer: The Hottest Specialization for Software Engineers
AI Infrastructure Engineers are the most in-demand software engineering specialization in 2026, driven by $500B in AI investment and the rapid expansion of GPU clusters and LLM serving systems.
What you'll learn
AI Output Verification Engineer: A New Frontier for Software Engineers
The AI Output Verification Engineer builds systems that verify hallucinations and fake references in LLM output. arXiv's one-year ban for hallucinated citations turned verification into a formal engineering role.
What you'll learn
LLM Inference Cost Engineer
LLM Inference Cost Engineer: The emerging role at the intersection of AI and unit economics. Designs model routing strategies, fine-tunes small language models (SLMs) for specific tasks, and implements caching/batching pipelines to reduce inference costs by 60–80% — making AI-native SaaS products economically viable at scale.
What you'll learn
Enterprise AI Automation Engineer
Enterprise AI Automation Engineer: integrating AI agents into HR, finance, and marketing back-office workflows. The role behind real enterprise AI deployments at Cloudflare, IBM, and Salesforce.
What you'll learn
AI Engineering Lead
AI Engineering Lead: an emerging role that directs AI code generation, validation, and deployment at the architectural level. As 60% of Airbnb's code is now AI-generated, someone needs to own the quality, security, and consistency of that output.
What you'll learn
AI Infrastructure Engineer Specialist
AI Infrastructure Engineers manage the physical and software foundations on which AI systems run — GPU clusters, inference serving, distributed training pipelines. Why this role is exploding in 2026, and how to get there.
What you'll learn
Agentic AI Systems Engineer Expert
Agentic AI Systems Engineer: what the role is, why it's the most in-demand AI specialization of 2026, and a step-by-step roadmap to build autonomous AI systems that actually complete tasks end-to-end.
What you'll learn
AI/ML Engineer Expert
A practical, mentor-style guide to becoming an AI/ML Engineer: what the role is, why demand is growing, and a step-by-step roadmap to build ML skills, ship production models, and grow your career.
What you'll learn
K-Content Global Film Sales Agent
A K-Content Global Film Sales Agent specializes in licensing Korean films to international distributors and OTT platforms. They work the four major international film markets — Cannes, Berlin, ACFM, and AFM — to close the deals that let a single Korean film reach 124 countries simultaneously.
What you'll learn
Enterprise AI Operations Manager Expert
Enterprise AI Operations Manager: the emerging management role born from the 2026 agentic AI wave. Not building agents — governing, operating, and improving them. A step-by-step roadmap for HR, finance, and marketing professionals transitioning into this role.
What you'll learn
Media & Entertainment M&A: The Investment Banker's Content-Capital Niche
The M&A banker who values content libraries and IP, models streaming-versus-theatrical economics, and structures cross-border media deals. Paramount's $110.9B Warner Bros. Discovery takeover shows what this niche now trades on.
What you'll learn
Semiconductor Capital Markets: A Hot Specialization for Investment Bankers
Semiconductor capital markets bankers run memory IPOs and fab capex financing. SK hynix's $29.4B US IPO shows how hot this niche has become.
What you'll learn
Tourism Tech Product Manager Specialist
Tourism Tech PM: Korea's first tourism trade surplus in 11 years, the structural demand surge for inbound travel platforms, and a step-by-step roadmap to build a career in medical tourism, K-content tour apps, and OTA product roles.
What you'll learn
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