For Patrick, everything looks great on paper. At 45, he pulls in a steady $120,000 salary in a specialized field as a developer, bolstered by a healthy annual bonus. He has zero debt, no kids, a paid-off car and a full year's emergency fund tucked away.
Better yet, he and his wife split $3,500 a month for rent in a high-cost city, a significant steal considering a new lease today would easily cost them $4,500. He even has $300,000 stashed for retirement.
But after surviving three rounds of corporate layoffs, Patrick can feel the ground shifting. The industry he spent decades building a career in is changing fast. In fact, he's convinced AI could wipe out his entire job category within the next few years.
His company offers a four-month severance package if he gets the axe, but if the local job market dries up completely, four months of runway will disappear in a flash.
And Patrick isn't just being paranoid. According to the World Economic Forum's 2025 Future of Jobs Report (1), 41% of global employers expect to shrink their workforces due to AI automation, while nearly 60% of workers will need total retraining by 2030 just to stay employable.
The good news is that Patrick is in a far better position than most to weather this storm. Here is how he can use his current financial stability to prepare for the unexpected.
Build a 'career transition' cushion
A one-year emergency fund is a sizable safety net for the average household. For Patrick, it might not be enough. Replacing a $120,000 salary can take a significant amount of time, especially for a mid-career professional.
Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2) reveals that unemployed workers aged 45 to 54 spend an average of 30 weeks (roughly seven months) just looking for a job. And that's the baseline across all sectors. If an entire field is possibly shrinking, that timeline can easily double.
Now is the time for Patrick to ditch the standard 12-month rule and target an 18-to-24-month liquid cushion. He shouldn't stop investing entirely, especially if he's leaving free money on the table via an employer 401(k) match.
However, any extra cash flow should pivot into high-yield savings accounts, Treasury bills, or short-term certificates of deposit (CDs) to lock in safe returns while his income is still strong.
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Activate a network before it's needed
Patricks' smartest financial move is to build a professional safety net before he even gets severance.
The biggest mistake people make is waiting until after a layoff to reach out to their network. By then, those introductory messages feel purely transactional. Instead, Patrick should use the stability of his current paycheck to refresh his portfolio, re-engage former colleagues and test the waters for possible contract work.
Another tactic would be to step outside his exact job description. Research analyzing more than 12 million job postings (3) found that, as AI adoption automates technical and repetitive tasks, employer demand is spiking for complementary human skills. Businesses are actively hunting for people with problem-solving abilities, strong communication, and analytical thinking.
Patrick's next paycheck might not come from the exact same job title, but mapping out transferable skills now will prevent a career pivot from becoming a financial crisis.
Upskill on the company's dime
At 45, Patrick is probably hitting the ceiling of his earning potential. This is why sitting around and waiting to retrain is a considerable gamble.
According to the same World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report 2025 (4), a whopping 63% of employers name skill gaps as the single biggest barrier holding back business transformation. Even more telling is that another 77% say that aggressively reskilling workers will be critical over the next five years.
That's not to say Patrick needs to blow up his resume and start from scratch. Instead, he should pinpoint specific certifications, technical skills or specialized expertise that will demonstrate his decades of experience.
The most successful career pivots rarely happen through dramatic resignations. They happen behind the scenes, one specialized course or additional credential at a time, all while the current day job foots the bills.
Read More: Dave Ramsey says this 7-step plan ‘works every single time’ to kill debt, get rich in America — and that ‘anyone’ can do it
Stress-test the household budget
The smartest move Patrick can make right now is to look at his finances through a worst-case lens.
He and his wife should map out exactly what life looks like if their household income suddenly drops by 30% or 50%. What if his next role pays $80,000 instead of $120,000? If he switches to freelance, what happens if that income takes a full year to stabilize?
They need to audit their fixed costs like housing, insurance and lifestyle expenses with fresh eyes. Could they comfortably stay in their current home on a reduced budget, or would things get tight fast?
It isn't about panicking, it's simply about getting clear on reality. Job loss rarely gives advance notice. When things change fast, the people who thrive aren't necessarily the ones holding the biggest paychecks, they're the ones who already have a plan in place.
Article sources
We rely only on vetted sources and credible third-party reporting. For details, see our ethics and guidelines.
World Economic Forum (1),(4); U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2); arXiv (3)
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Laura Grande is a freelance contributor with nearly 15 years of industry experience. Throughout her career she's written about and edited a range of topics, from personal finance and politics to health and pop culture.
