Managers, All Other
All managers not listed separately.
Assessment Not Available
"Managers, All Other" is a residual SOC classification that groups miscellaneous roles not individually defined. These catch-all codes lack the specific task data needed for risk scoring.
Specializations (9)
Click a specialization below to see its individual risk assessment.
Regulatory Affairs Managers
11-9199.01
Compliance Managers
11-9199.02
Investment Fund Managers
11-9199.03
Supply Chain Managers
11-9199.04
Security Managers
11-9199.07
Loss Prevention Managers
11-9199.08
Wind Energy Operations Managers
11-9199.09
Wind Energy Project Managers
11-9199.10
Brownfield Redevelopment Specialists and Site Managers
11-9199.11
Related News
Recent articles about AI affecting this occupation

Tech CEOs plan to use AI for heightened workforce management and control.
Leaders like Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey are developing automated systems to monitor and manage employees at scale. This vision of AI-driven oversight could drastically reduce the need for middle managers while increasing executive surveillance.

Block's Jack Dorsey Justifies 4,000 Layoffs With Major AI Push
Block recently slashed 4,000 jobs, a move CEO Jack Dorsey attributes to the company's aggressive pivot toward AI automation. The restructuring aims to flatten management and replace traditional roles with AI-driven efficiencies.

Media jobs face shift as AI 'bot readers' projected to drive publisher revenue
Tollbit's founders warn media companies to prepare for a landscape where AI agents, rather than human subscribers, consume and pay for online content. This fundamental shift in monetization could drastically alter editorial strategies and journalism roles.

Surging AI Bots Harvest Publisher Content Without Compensation
A new data report highlights a massive spike in AI bots scraping digital media sites for training data without paying creators. This uncompensated harvesting threatens publisher revenue models, putting journalism and content creation jobs at direct risk.

Third-Party AI Scrapers Threaten Publisher Revenue and Media Jobs
A growing shadow market of data brokers is scraping journalistic content to sell to AI developers. This bypasses direct licensing deals, threatening the revenue streams that keep newsrooms staffed.