By Beatrice Olumhense
A 25-Year-Old and Three Careers?
Meet Aisha. She is 25, lives between Lagos and the US, and works across time zones like it is second nature.
Her week looks something like this:
- She runs a small wellness startup with AI handling logistics and customer service.
- She freelances as a digital strategist for two global clients.
- And she consults part-time for a tech accelerator — mostly via Zoom and AI-assisted workflows.
Aisha doesn’t have a “job” in the traditional sense. She has a portfolio — a mosaic of projects, income streams, and collaborations that together make up her career.
She is not climbing a ladder. She’s weaving a web.
The Death of the Career Ladder
For most of the 20th century, the path was predictable:
Study hard → land a stable job → climb the hierarchy → retire with a pension.
But AI, automation, and digital platforms are blowing that ladder apart.
What is emerging instead is the Portfolio Career — a world where your professional identity isn’t tied to a single company or title, but to your skills, networks, and projects.
We have entered an era where people are less “employed” and more deployed.
The Rise of the Portfolio Career
AI has made it cheaper and faster than ever to start something.
A single person can now:
- Launch a micro-business with AI handling the admin, design, and accounting.
- Offer global consulting services via digital platforms.
- Upskill in weeks using personalised AI tutors.
This means the barriers that once kept people in rigid career ladders are gone. The new currency is agility — your ability to adapt, create, and connect value across disciplines.
We are seeing the rise of the fractional professional: people who hold multiple part-time leadership roles, teach, create, consult, and build — all at once.
The question isn’t “Where do you work?” but “What are you building?”
The Implications for Education
Our institutions haven’t caught up.
Most universities still prepare students for one linear career, when the future demands they manage several at once.
Instead of training students to write CVs, they should focus on helping them build portfolios — of skills, experiments, and proof of impact.
Graduates will need to:
- Navigate networks, not hierarchies.
- Monetise expertise across platforms.
- Curate personal brands that reflect credibility and versatility.
- Manage AI teammates and human collaborators simultaneously.
In other words, universities must start producing navigators of networks, not ladder climbers.
A New Definition of Success
Success in the portfolio era will not mean loyalty to one organisation — it will mean relevance across many.
The most valuable professionals will be those who:
- Keep learning faster than the world changes.
- Treat their career like a living organism — adaptable, evolving, and diverse.
- Use AI as a multiplier, not a threat.
Where the old ladder rewarded stability, the new web rewards resilience, curiosity, and reinvention.
The Provocation
If universities continue to train students for single-track careers, they will graduate into a world that no longer exists.
It is time to replace career counselling with portfolio coaching.
To measure graduates not by their first job title, but by the breadth of their applied projects.
Because in an AI-enabled world, the question isn’t “What’s your job?” —
It’s “What do you know how to create?”
Bottom Line
The ladder is gone. The web is here.
And those who learn to navigate it — rather than mourn it — will own the future.