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After forcing workers back to the office, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase are now letting their staff work remotely—but only for the World Cup

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NewslettersFortune Workplace Innovation

The executive assistant role isn’t dying. It’s getting promoted

Kristin Stoller
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Kristin Stoller
Kristin Stoller
Editorial Director, Fortune Live Media
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Kristin Stoller
By
Kristin Stoller
Kristin Stoller
Editorial Director, Fortune Live Media
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June 22, 2026, 8:33 AM ET
Three coworkers sit around a computer.
AI was supposed to replace executive assistants. It promoted them instead.Getty Images
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Despite layoffs hitting executive assistants at companies including PwC and McKinsey, the role may not be disappearing. It may be evolving into something more powerful.

In the age of AI, the best executive assistants won’t just manage calendars and expenses, says Adnan Khan, cofounder and co-CEO of executive assistant staffing firm Viva Talent. They’ll increasingly act as proxies for the executives they support.

“The goal is to be as much of a proxy for the executive as possible and all the things that cannot be done by AI,” he says. “So, less assistant, more executive.” 

Khan says he hasn’t had many clients tell him they are cutting EA roles. Instead, they are looking for more advanced assistants who can leverage AI strategically to support larger teams, manage more complex workflows, and take on responsibilities traditionally reserved for managers or chiefs of staff.

That could mean running company-wide meetings on an executive’s behalf, coordinating cross-functional initiatives, or even conducting initial performance reviews for an executive’s direct reports, Khan predicts.

The market appears to be rewarding that shift. A new Payscale report found that some of the jobs AI was expected to replace—like executive assistants—are seeing rising pay. Employers are even paying a premium to attract them: In the tech industry, executive assistants command a 26% new-hire market advantage, earning $110,000 compared to $87,000 for incumbent employees. 

Khan attributes the demand to qualities AI has yet to master. Executive assistants are expected to exercise empathy, relatability, and sound judgment—skills that remain critical in a role built as much on human relationships as operational efficiency, he says.

One executive recently told Khan that the value behind a human assistant is that they “hold him accountable like a peer, not like a subordinate or a tool.” A trusted assistant can push for decisions, challenge assumptions, and drive follow-through in ways software simply can’t.

Khan notes that some of the world’s leading AI companies, including OpenAI and Anthropic, still rely on executive assistants and continue to hire them. “If they are not eliminating EAs, then who is?” he says. “They are certainly not signaling that it’s an obsolete role that will be replaced by their own tech.”

Kristin Stoller
Editorial Director, Fortune Live Media
kristin.stoller@fortune.com

Around the Table

A round-up of the most important HR headlines.

Should middle managers exist? That’s the big debate company leaders are having as these bosses get the ax. Bloomberg

Recruiters are using AI in creative ways to fix the broken job interview process. Wall Street Journal

New research shows that remote work has contributed to a third of mental health deterioration over the last 15 years. New York Times

Watercooler

Everything you need to know from Fortune.

Tokenmaxxing trouble. Despite tokens getting cheaper, experts warn that companies are spending more on AI as a result. —Sasha Rogelberg

Grind culture. Shark Tank investor Kevin O’Leary slams work-life balance, saying founders should work “25 hours a day, eight days a week.” —Sydney Lake

Affordability crisis. For the first time in U.S. history, the majority of American families have both mom and dad working full-time. —Jacqueline Munis

This is the web version of the Fortune Workplace Innovation newsletter—your insider guide to the trends, issues, and thought leaders shaping the management of any business’ most precious resource: its people. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.
About the Author
Kristin Stoller
By Kristin StollerEditorial Director, Fortune Live Media
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Kristin Stoller is an editorial director at Fortune focused on expanding Fortune's C-suite communities.

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