VC Mike Ghaffary is looking for the job-creating AI startup that doesn’t yet exist | TechCrunch

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Silicon Valley is madly building AI agents to augment human labor. If such agents work as intended, a whole swath of jobs could become extinct ā€” or close to it. AI agents are poised to displace customer service reps, sales associates, executive assistants, IT admins, junior developers, and journalists. AI startup Boardy even replaces the ā€œhelpful VCā€ by automating introductions to people.

When founders or investors are asked about the potential job displacement their tech will cause, the answer is always the same: Yes, AI will eliminate some jobs. But it will also create others.

Ensuring that it does has become VC Mike Ghaffaryā€™s obsession. Ghaffary is best known for his time as a general partner at Canvas Ventures and previously at Social Capital. His investments include Superhuman, Strava, Faire, Optimizely, and CloudKitchens.Ā 

On Friday, Ghaffary announced exclusively to TechCrunch that he left Canvas to join Burst Capital, a VC firm founded in 2017 by a group of former Yelp execs. Burst is led by former Yelp COO Geoff Donaker. (Ghaffary and Donaker also worked together at Yelp years ago.)

At Burst, Ghaffary is looking to back companies that donā€™t just create jobs but create good-paying middle-class jobs for the millions of people who donā€™t have advanced degrees in AI and machine learning.

ā€œAs weā€™re seeing this job displacement, weā€™re actually doing something about it,ā€ he tells TechCrunch. ā€œI feel like thereā€™s a lot of ā€˜Donā€™t worry. Donā€™t look here. AI will destroy a lot of jobs, but it will create jobs, too!ā€™ As tech companies, we need to go create those new jobs weā€™re promising.ā€

He sees a few companies doing so by offering tech to small business owners, like Owner.com, which helps mom-and-pop restaurant owners with marketing; or GlossGenius, which makes all-in-one booking and payments software for hairdressers.Ā 

Among his own portfolio is ResQ, which helps restaurants and hospitality businesses manage their equipment repair needs, including matching them with repair tradesmen.

But Ghaffary says the biggest gap he sees is startups using AI to create high-paying jobs. ā€œIā€™ll tell you one company Iā€™m looking for, too, that I havenā€™t found: vocational training.ā€

He wants to see founders building startups that use AI to help people learn high-paying trades like industrial electricians or commercial plumbers, or to level up their skills in other such industries.

ā€œThatā€™s where AI could come in,ā€ he says. Heā€™d like to see an affordable plan that would offer virtual or otherwise AI-enhanced training, ā€œalmost like flight simulationā€ but for the ā€œmillions of peopleā€ at risk of being left behind.

ā€œI think thereā€™s a big opportunity,ā€ he says. ā€œAnd itā€™s for the sake of our country and our world. Otherwise we have this big underemployed society and itā€™s not good for anybody.ā€