As of June 2026, Compensation, Benefits, and Job Analysis Specialists has an AI-exposure score of 69/100 (High exposure) on the AI-Safe Careers index, blending O*NET tasks, the Anthropic Economic Index, the Penn/OpenAI study, and BLS data. This is an estimate of task exposure, not a prediction of job loss.
Compensation, Benefits, and Job Analysis Specialists
More exposed than 89% of the roles we track. Median pay ~US$78,210. About 8,500 projected openings a year (BLS 2024–34 — growth plus replacement).
Pay & demand figures are US medians (BLS, in USD) — your local figures will differ. Your exposure score applies broadly.
How you compare to similar Business & Finance roles
Your tasks, by AI exposure
- Analyze organizational, occupational, and industrial data to facilitate organizational functions and provide technical information to business, industry, and government.
- Observe, interview, and survey employees and conduct focus group meetings to collect job, organizational, and occupational information.
- Assist in preparing and maintaining personnel records and handbooks.
- Prepare reports, such as organization and flow charts and career path reports, to summarize job analysis and evaluation and compensation analysis information.
- Develop and administer compensation programs, such as merit or incentive pay.
- Perform multifactor data and cost analyses that may be used in areas such as support of collective bargaining agreements.
- Administer employee insurance, pension, and savings plans, working with insurance brokers and plan carriers.
- Provide advice on the resolution of classification and salary complaints.
- Evaluate job positions, determining classification, exempt or non-exempt status, and salary.
- Prepare occupational classifications, job descriptions, and salary scales.
- Assess need for and develop job analysis instruments and materials.
- Ensure company compliance with federal and state laws, including reporting requirements.
- Consult with, or serve as, technical liaison between business, industry, government, and union officials.
- Develop, implement, administer, and evaluate personnel and labor relations programs, including performance appraisal, affirmative action, and employment equity programs.
- Plan, develop, evaluate, improve, and communicate methods and techniques for selecting, promoting, compensating, evaluating, and training workers.
- Research employee benefit and health and safety practices, and recommend changes or modifications to existing policies.
- Plan and develop curricula and materials for training programs and conduct training.
- Advise managers and employees on state and federal employment regulations, collective agreements, benefit and compensation policies, personnel procedures, and classification programs.
- Research job and worker requirements, structural and functional relationships among jobs and occupations, and occupational trends.
- Negotiate collective agreements on behalf of employers or workers, and mediate labor disputes and grievances.
No durable tasks identified for this role — its real, individually-assessed tasks consistently read as automatable (75%).
Safer adjacent roles
Your AI-Safe Career Report
Every task scored with what to do about it · 5–10 safer roles with salary, demand & reachability · skill-gap map · a 30/60/90-day roadmap · plus a résumé & LinkedIn rewrite · PDF.
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AI was the most-cited reason for U.S. layoffs through mid-2026 — the workers who adapt earliest fare best. — Challenger, Gray & Christmas, 2026The upside: Workers with AI skills earn a roughly 62% wage premium — adapting pays. — PwC Global AI Jobs Barometer, 2026
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