Telecommunications technicians
Physical, social, or oversight-heavy work that AI augments rather than replaces.
SOC · Installation Maintenance And Repair
Signal composition
how the 0-100 score is assembled
By seniority
multiplicative adjustment from category curve
Entry-level roles carry the brunt because they concentrate the most automatable subset of tasks. Senior work is insulated by judgment, relationships, and accountability.
Task-level analysis
scored 0-100 for current-generation AI feasibility, weighted by BLS-stated importance
Keep records of maintenance, repairs, and installations
Record-keeping of structured maintenance data, repair logs, and installation details is highly automatable through voice-to-text, automated form population from technician inputs, and integration with work order systems—AI can handle data entry and organization with minimal human review.
BLS evidence: Telecommunications technicians keep records of maintenance, repairs, and installations.
Monitor and troubleshoot network signals and equipment malfunctions remotely
AI excels at continuous monitoring of network signals, pattern recognition for anomalies, automated diagnostics of equipment status, and alert generation—most remote troubleshooting can be automated with human review for complex issues or decisions requiring service dispatch.
BLS evidence: Central office technicians receive alerts about equipment malfunctions from automonitoring switches and are able to correct the problems remotely.
Explain equipment use and maintenance procedures to customers
AI can generate clear documentation and instructional content for standard equipment, but in-person customer explanations require reading customer technical literacy, adapting explanations in real-time, demonstrating physical equipment operation, and building trust—human remains primary with AI-generated materials as support.
BLS evidence: Telecommunications technicians explain the use and maintenance of equipment to customers.
Test telecommunications lines and devices to ensure proper functionality
AI can analyze test results, interpret signal patterns, and suggest diagnostics, but a technician must physically connect test equipment, navigate to equipment locations, and make real-time judgment calls based on environmental factors and physical observations.
BLS evidence: Telecommunications technicians test telecommunications lines or devices to ensure that they work properly.
Repair or maintain damaged or malfunctioning telecommunications equipment and devices
Demands hands-on diagnosis of physical hardware failures, component replacement with precision tools, soldering or connector work, and troubleshooting in diverse field conditions—physical dexterity and on-site adaptability far beyond current AI+robotics capabilities.
BLS evidence: Telecommunications technicians typically operate, maintain, or repair damaged or malfunctioning telecommunications lines or equipment.
Set up and maintain switches and fiber optic cables at central offices
Involves precise physical manipulation of fiber optic cables (which are fragile and require specialized splicing), rack mounting of switches in telecom facilities, and cable management in complex infrastructure—all requiring expert manual dexterity and spatial reasoning in three-dimensional environments.
BLS evidence: Central office technicians set up and maintain switches, fiber optic cables, and other equipment at switching hubs, called central offices.
Install telecommunications equipment such as internet routers, modems, and switches
Requires physical presence to mount equipment, run cables through walls/ceilings, connect hardware in varied building layouts, and verify physical connections—all requiring fine motor skills and spatial problem-solving in unpredictable physical environments that current robotics cannot handle.
BLS evidence: Telecommunications technicians set up and maintain various types of devices or equipment that carry communications signals, such as telephone lines and internet routers.
Install and repair telecommunications equipment in customers' homes and businesses
Combines all physical installation challenges (mounting, wiring, connecting) with customer interaction in varied residential/commercial settings, requiring navigation of unique building layouts, problem-solving around obstacles, and real-time customer communication—entirely beyond AI automation.
BLS evidence: Residential and business installers and repairers set up and repair telecommunications equipment, such as modems for internet and cable television services, in customers' homes and businesses.
Install aerial and underground telecommunications wiring
Requires climbing poles or digging trenches, pulling cables through conduits, working at heights or underground, splicing connections in outdoor conditions, and navigating utility corridors—highly physical work in unpredictable environments completely unsuitable for current automation.
BLS evidence: Residential and business installers and repairers may need to install aerial and underground wiring.
Task heatmap
automation score by task, sorted by weighted contribution
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External signals and sources
category-level priors and BLS fields that feed the four non-task signals
- Karpathy/BLS Digital AI Exposure (0-10 scale rescaled to 0-100)
- BLS projected outlook: Decline (-3%)
- Indeed demand signal (monthly refresh pending)
- BLS typical entry-level education: See How to Become One
- Credential trend signal (annual refresh)
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