vs
62 shared · 22 different
core competencies
Side-by-Side Comparison
Electronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers leads 4–0| Metric | Audio-Visual and Multimedia Collections Specialists | Electronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers |
|---|---|---|
| Risk Score | 27.8% | 26.9% |
| Risk Tier | Medium Risk | Medium Risk |
| Risk Percentile | 28th | 25th |
| Tasks at Risk (>50%) | 6 / 15 | 2 / 11 |
| Median Salary | N/A | $50,620 |
| Employment | N/A | 22K |
Skill Comparison
|
Sorted by largest difference
Communications and Media
Engineering and Technology
Clerical
Communicating with Supervisors, Peers, or Subordinates
Repairing and Maintaining Electronic Equipment
Education and Training
Interacting With Computers
English Language
Provide Consultation and Advice to Others
Scheduling Work and Activities
Far Vision
WritingAI-Augmented
Protective Factors
Higher values indicate stronger protection against AI displacement
Audio-Visual and Multimedia Collections Specialists
30%
total discount
Electronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers
29%
total discount
Task Risk Comparison
Tasks sorted by AI automation risk — higher means more automatable
Audio-Visual and Multimedia Collections Specialists
6 of 15 at risk86%Acquire, catalog, and maintain collections of audio-visual material such as films, video- and audio-tapes, photographs, and software programs.
84%Maintain inventory of audiovisual equipment.
61%Edit audiovisual material to enhance viewing quality.
54%Determine formats, approaches, content, levels, and mediums necessary to meet production objectives effectively and within budgetary constraints.
51%Plan and prepare audio-visual teaching aids and methods for use in school systems.
Electronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers
2 of 11 at risk88%Compute cost estimates for labor and materials.
88%Keep records of work orders and test and maintenance reports.
48%Read and interpret electronic circuit diagrams, function block diagrams, specifications, engineering drawings, and service manuals.
43%Tune or adjust equipment and instruments to obtain optimum visual or auditory reception, according to specifications, manuals, and drawings.
35%Disassemble entertainment equipment and repair or replace loose, worn, or defective components and wiring, using hand tools and soldering irons.
Wage Comparison
Audio-Visual and Multimedia Collections SpecialistsElectronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers
10th
N/A$36,310
25th
N/A$43,330
Median
N/A$50,620
75th
N/A$63,250
90th
N/A$82,150
Premium Head-to-Head Analysis
Displacement Timeline Comparison
Audio-Visual and Multimedia Collections Specialists2028–2035
Electronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers2028–2035
20242030203520402045
Electronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers has a longer runway before significant displacement, projected 0 years later than Audio-Visual and Multimedia Collections Specialists.
Transition Feasibility
1%
Skill Overlap
Low overlap — significant retraining needed for transition
0
Unique to Audio-Visual
0
Unique to Electronic
Combined Protection Strategy
Regardless of which path you choose, focus on these protective factors
Fine Manipulation
Creativity
Social Intelligence
Decision Complexity
Audio-Visual and Multimedia Collections SpecialistsElectronic Home Entertainment Equipment Installers and Repairers