The labor market just split into four classes, and most people won't know which one they're in until the layoff.
The Operator: 2026 is the first volume of an annual field guide for building a career that AI can't erase. Written by Roger Daniel Grubb, a carpenter, corporate refugee, fifteen-year real-estate veteran, and now, at sixty-two, a self-taught software builder living the shift he describes, it trades hype for arithmetic and false comfort for an honest audit of where you actually stand.
Inside: the Audit that scores your replaceability in pen; the Equation behind operator leverage; the AI-Proof Path through the trades and the medical bench; the Combined Stack; the Safeguard, the Pivot, the Operator's Day, and the Boss Meeting; and a 2027 Preview with five graded predictions and a public wager.
Every operator in the book is a real, verifiable human, no composites and no LinkedIn fiction. And beneath the strategy runs a quieter story: a boy who watched a neighbor make candles in her basement and wondered whether a life could be both authentic and paid for, and the fifty-year road back to that basement.
This is not a book about beating AI. It's a book about becoming the kind of person the next decade still pays, on terms you choose.
The window is open. Walk through it.