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will AI replace weighers, measurers, checkers, and samplers, recordkeeping?
watch list
0
68/100 career outlook
Mixed picture. AI is picking up parts of your role, and the industry is flat. The human side of your work is what keeps you ahead.
0% ai exposure-4.8% job growth
job growth
-4.8%
2024–2034
employed (2024)
49,800
people
annual openings
5,300
per year
ai exposure
0.0%
Anthropic index
how you compare
career outlook vs similar roles
1/2
Weighers, Measurers, Checkers, and Samplers, Recordkeeping ←
68
the full picture
Your role sits in an interesting spot. AI isn't automating your core tasks right now, but the sector itself is shrinking, which means fewer positions overall. The work of weighing, measuring, documenting, and spotting defects remains hands-on and direct. Machines can't yet reliably replace the physical inspection and judgment calls you make on the line.
Where you're genuinely hard to replace is in the judgment part. You examine products for damage and defects using gauges and spec sheets, collect samples that need real discretion, and signal other workers based on what you see. That quality control gatekeeping, the ability to catch what matters and communicate it to the team, is still fundamentally human work. Your records become the actual truth of what moved through the operation.
The decline in the role reflects broader manufacturing shifts more than AI displacement. If you want to stay relevant, deepen your knowledge of the materials and systems you're measuring. Certifications in quality control or sampling standards would make you more valuable as the field contracts and employers want fewer people doing this work at higher skill levels.
task breakdown
this is all you
8
tasks where you're irreplaceable
- Document quantity, quality, type, weight, test result data, and value of materials or products to maintain shipping, receiving, and production records and files.
- Weigh or measure materials, equipment, or products to maintain relevant records, using volume meters, scales, rules, or calipers.
- Collect or prepare measurement, weight, or identification labels and attach them to products.
- Examine products or materials, parts, subassemblies, and packaging for damage, defects, or shortages, using specification sheets, gauges, and standards charts.
- Signal or instruct other workers to weigh, move, or check products.
- Collect product samples and prepare them for laboratory analysis or testing.
- Maintain, monitor, and clean work areas, such as recycling collection sites, drop boxes, counters and windows, and areas around scale houses.
- Compare product labels, tags, or tickets, shipping manifests, purchase orders, and bills of lading to verify accuracy of shipment contents, quality specifications, or weights.
ai speeds this up
0
tasks AI can assist with
no tasks in this category
ai handles this
0
tasks with high AI penetration
no tasks in this category