Preparing to ‘future-proof’ your career
Discover how ASU prepares students to step into high-demand roles such as artificial intelligence, project management and information technology

By Lisa Robbins, ASU News
April 13, 2026

Editor's note: This story was featured in the winter 2026 issue of ASU Thrive.

The future of work is changing fast. New technologies, artificial intelligence, global health shifts and emerging industries are redefining what it takes to succeed. 

That’s why ASU is creating degrees built for the next generation of leaders. 

With health care projected to be the fastest growing sector through 2034, and hundreds of thousands of new roles emerging in project management, AI and information technology each year, learners at ASU are prepared for the job market of the future because their education was designed for it. 

Learn more at career.asu.edu.

By the numbers

5.2 million jobs 
projected to be added to the U.S. economy from 2024 to 2034

60% of employers 
expect broadening digital access, including AI, to transform their businesses by 2030

39% of workers’ skills 
will be transformed or outdated by 2030

800,000+ positions 
emerging in professional, scientific and technical services from 2024 to 2034

514,000+ cybersecurity job openings 
in the U.S. today

207,000 
shortage of nurses projected by 2037

86,000 
shortage of physicians projected by 2036

78,000 new project managers 
needed each year

Sources: U.S. Department of Labor, World Economic Forum, Bureau of Health Workforce, Association of American Medical Colleges, Project Management Institute, National Institute of Stands and Technology

Some of the degrees that will get you there

AI in business

Engineering management

Health care administration and policy

Organizational leadership

Project management

Psychology (sports psychology)

Public health

Public health technology 

Learn more at degrees.asu.edu.

Testimonials
 
I really like the on-campus aspect (of the MBA program). … It works with my schedule and I don’t have to quit my job. I’m able to (attend class) in the evenings, usually one night a week, which helps a lot with arranging child care and commuting from where I live.
McKennah Schroeder'15 BA in English, Master of Business Administration graduate student 
(We were) asked challenging questions that made us think critically about topics like universal basic income, creativity with digital art, cancer detection and job replacement. These conversations connect to real issues in AI and make the (AI in business) program feel relevant.
Juan Carrasco'25 BA in applied business and technical solutions, AI in business graduate student
This story originally appeared on ASU News.