If you’re going to get a job at a forward-thinking organization in 2025, you’re 100% going to need AI fluency and skills. That's at the very least non-negotiable.
AI today in the world of work is what Microsoft Office was to the workplace 10 or 15 years ago. It’s a basic fundamental skill and without it you’re not hireable. And even if you were hired now, you’ll easily be the first to be disposed of, as Accenture’s recent layoff news strongly illustrates (Accenture is laying off as much as 11,000 staff who are not ready to adapt to AI).
There’s plenty of workforce data to prove that AI fluency is a much-needed fundamental career skill. And it's not just something that's good to have for an organization to be able to implement AI effectively, although that is one critical factor.
AI fluency benefits your career in several ways beyond that. Having AI skills can lead to:
But don’t get me wrong, AI fluency is more than just knowing how to enter a few simple prompts into ChatGPT. That's not strategy. That's not what organizations are looking for.
So what do these employers need to see in your resume?
In my interview with Dan Rogers, CEO of Asana, at the Work Innovation Summit in London a couple weeks ago, as well as the breakout sessions I attended, one thing was abundantly clear: AI literacy is all about applied AI strategy, clear, clean workflows that are completely reimagined, and having the right guardrails in place (Global State of AI at Work report 2025).
With this in mind, I’ve curated a small list of helpful AI certifications to enable you to close your knowledge gap, apply AI to your specific domain of work, and use it to optimize and engineer new workflows. These are the perfect addition to your resume and can serve as a talking point for your job interviews too.
Not everyone needs to be a coder or developer; but everyone needs to move beyond basic AI awareness to knowing how to apply it tangibly to their function and that of their team, especially with 92% of employers listing AI skills as a job requirement, per a new AWS study.
These certifications go beyond the typical “Generative AI basics” and instantly help you raise the way you’re perceived through your resume. They demonstrate that you’re just as serious about AI implementation and literacy as your prospective employer, and they show that you’re rolling with the changes and proactively preparing for them, not working against AI. This aligns you perfectly with the organization’s strategy and helps you to stand out as a candidate.
And don’t worry, even if you’ve just started studying these AI courses or are in the process of completing them, you can still include these in your resume.