@Sleazy nailed it in his first-page comment when he referred to having some diversity, I mostly do web/online app development, but I can kick over to UX/UI or even pre press if I had to. Having said, we're at the fetal stages of AI right now, so it's hard to gauge what it's gonna be like a month from now.
I do private and government contracts, and the implementation of generative tools will have a much bigger impact on private company employees doing the type of stuff I do, as we often handle sensitive data that you don't want processed or seen outside of the networks under your organization's control. A tech company would be more likely to save money on staff whereas government agencies usually have pretty set budgets and are less likely to risk data exposure.
Right now I love a lot of the tools that have come from AI, and depending on the entity you work for, it may help to be the AI-authority in your organization. I'm using my current position to maintain that angle now. A lot of folks can write a prompt, but even now, if an HR manager had GPT write an entire application, you need someone who knows how to implement it and clean the code.
Like I said though, this is today. I've been in this business since '98, so change isn't new (though the speed of change has increased). IT/Tech has always been a hustle... this is a good wakeup for all of us in the sector, just learn what you can and keep up with it like every other little nuanced thing we pick up due to the work or just being a solid geek.
It's kinda scary, but I'm also stoked to see everything moving so fast. Just trying to keep up.