Eighteen months ago, “Prompt Engineer” was hailed as the hottest new job title in tech. Today, most companies have quietly folded that role into broader positions — because writing good prompts turned out to be a skill everyone needs, not a standalone job.
What replaced it
The roles gaining traction now are AI Generalists — people who combine prompt craft with a working understanding of how AI models are evaluated, where they fail, basic API integration, and enough product sense to know where AI actually adds value versus where it’s a gimmick.
Why this is a better bet for freshers
A narrow “prompt engineer” skill set ages quickly as tools improve and prompting gets easier. A broader AI Generalist skill set — understanding model limitations, basic evaluation metrics, and how to integrate AI into an existing product or workflow — stays valuable even as the underlying tools change.
How to build toward this
Go beyond prompting ChatGPT for fun. Build one small project that calls an AI API programmatically (even a simple Python script), learn the basics of how models are evaluated for accuracy and bias, and read a handful of real case studies on where companies successfully — and unsuccessfully — deployed AI features.
The title “Prompt Engineer” may be fading. The underlying opportunity is bigger than ever — it just goes by a different name now.

Leave a Reply