Role Definition
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Job Title | Counselor, All Other (SOC 21-1019) |
| Seniority Level | Mid-Level (3-7 years, certified/credentialed, independent caseload) |
| Primary Function | BLS catch-all for counselors not classified under mental health, substance abuse, school/career, rehabilitation, or marriage/family categories. Encompasses bereavement/grief counselors, art therapists, music therapists, dance/movement therapists, pastoral counselors (non-clergy), spiritual counselors, fertility counselors, and other niche specialisms. Conducts client assessments, delivers individual and group counseling, develops individualised care/action plans, coordinates referrals, maintains clinical documentation, and provides community outreach and psychoeducation. |
| What This Role Is NOT | NOT a licensed mental health counselor (21-1014 — scored separately, Green at 69.6). NOT a school/educational/career counselor (21-1012). NOT a rehabilitation counselor (21-1015). NOT a marriage/family therapist (21-1013). NOT a genetic counselor (29-9092 — classified under healthcare). Those are distinct BLS categories with dedicated SOC codes. |
| Typical Experience | 3-7 years. Master's degree common but not universal across all sub-types. Certifications vary by specialism: ATR (Art Therapy Registered), MT-BC (Music Therapy Board Certified), CT (Certified Thanatologist), NCC (National Certified Counselor). Licensing requirements vary significantly by state — some require LPC for all counseling, others have no licensure requirements for niche specialties like art therapy or pastoral counseling. |
Seniority note: Entry-level counselors in this catch-all would score deeper Yellow — less autonomy, more structured intake work, higher proportion of automatable tasks. Senior counselors with complex caseloads, supervisory responsibilities, and full clinical licensure would approach the Mental Health Counselor profile (69.6 Green).
Protective Principles + AI Growth Correlation
| Principle | Score (0-3) | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Embodied Physicality | 0 | Office-based or telehealth. Some art/music therapists use physical materials, but the work is relational and cognitive, not physical in the Moravec's Paradox sense. |
| Deep Interpersonal Connection | 2 | Counseling involves trust and personal disclosure, but the depth varies by specialism. Grief counseling with a bereaved family approaches the therapeutic alliance depth of licensed clinical counselors. Structured psychoeducation workshops and community outreach are less emotionally intensive. Scored 2 (significant) rather than 3 (core) to reflect the category average. |
| Goal-Setting & Moral Judgment | 1 | Some professional judgment in assessment, care planning, and crisis recognition. But most work follows evidence-based frameworks and structured protocols. Fewer high-stakes, ambiguous decisions than licensed mental health counselors handling suicidal ideation or involuntary commitment. |
| Protective Total | 3/9 | |
| AI Growth Correlation | 0 | Demand driven by bereavement rates (ageing population), mental health awareness, creative arts therapy integration into healthcare, and spiritual care needs — not by AI adoption. AI neither creates nor destroys demand for these niche counseling services. |
Quick screen result: Protective 3/9 with moderate interpersonal anchor — likely Yellow Zone. Proceed to quantify.
Task Decomposition (Agentic AI Scoring)
| Task | Time % | Score (1-5) | Weighted | Aug/Disp | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual/group counseling sessions | 25% | 1 | 0.25 | NOT INVOLVED | The human relationship is the intervention — grief support, art therapy process, pastoral guidance. Clients seek a person who understands their experience. AI cannot hold space for loss, facilitate therapeutic creative expression, or provide spiritual counsel. |
| Client intake and needs assessment | 10% | 3 | 0.30 | AUGMENTATION | AI agents can administer standardised intake questionnaires, score assessment tools, and summarise presenting concerns. The counselor conducts the clinical interview, interprets emotional context, and determines appropriateness for services. |
| Developing care/treatment/action plans | 10% | 3 | 0.30 | AUGMENTATION | AI drafts plan templates from assessment data and evidence-based protocols. The counselor reviews, personalises, and approves — bringing clinical judgment about what this specific client needs in context. |
| Case management and referral coordination | 15% | 3 | 0.45 | AUGMENTATION | AI excels at matching clients to community resources, identifying appropriate programmes, and coordinating scheduling. The counselor leads advocacy, navigates complex eligibility situations, and makes judgment calls about appropriate placements. |
| Clinical/session documentation and record-keeping | 15% | 4 | 0.60 | DISPLACEMENT | AI ambient documentation tools generate session notes from transcripts. Progress notes, compliance documentation, and EHR entries increasingly AI-drafted. Human reviews and signs off, but the generation process is shifting to AI-first. |
| Crisis intervention and safety assessment | 5% | 1 | 0.05 | NOT INVOLVED | When clients present in acute distress — suicidal ideation during grief counseling, severe anxiety, child safety concerns — human judgment with legal and ethical accountability is required. |
| Administrative tasks (billing, scheduling, compliance) | 10% | 4 | 0.40 | DISPLACEMENT | Insurance coding, scheduling, compliance tracking, and continuing education administration are structured tasks AI handles well. Already being automated in larger agencies and group practices. |
| Community outreach, workshops, psychoeducation | 5% | 3 | 0.15 | AUGMENTATION | AI generates workshop materials, designs psychoeducational content, and analyses community needs data. The counselor delivers, facilitates, and adapts in real time to audience needs. |
| Professional development, supervision, consultation | 5% | 2 | 0.10 | AUGMENTATION | AI surfaces relevant research and flags training opportunities, but peer consultation and clinical supervision require human mentoring and professional trust. |
| Total | 100% | 2.60 |
Task Resistance Score: 6.00 - 2.60 = 3.40/5.0
Displacement/Augmentation split: 25% displacement, 45% augmentation, 30% not involved.
Reinstatement check (Acemoglu): AI creates modest new tasks — "validate AI-generated intake summaries," "interpret automated screening results," "review AI-drafted documentation for clinical accuracy," "provide human context for AI-flagged risk factors." These reinstatement tasks augment the counselor's workflow but do not fundamentally expand the role's scope.
Evidence Score
| Dimension | Score (-2 to 2) | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Job Posting Trends | 0 | BLS projects average growth for SOC 21-1019, with approximately 8,100 annual openings across the catch-all. Community and social service occupations overall growing 7.5% 2024-2034 (3x average), but this specific catch-all tracks closer to average. Stable, not surging. |
| Company Actions | 0 | No companies cutting niche counselors citing AI. No acute shortage signals either. AI chatbots (Wysa, newer LLM-based tools) expanding as supplementary support but have not triggered counselor layoffs. Woebot — the most prominent AI therapy chatbot — shut down in June 2025, validating the limitations of AI-only approaches. |
| Wage Trends | -1 | BLS data shows wages $40,400-$56,480 depending on setting (May 2023). Low end of the licensed professional spectrum. Wages tracking inflation at best — not growing in real terms. Significantly below mental health counselors ($59,190) and healthcare social workers ($62,940). |
| AI Tool Maturity | 0 | AI documentation tools (ambient note-taking, session transcription) in early adoption. Case management platforms (Social Solutions Apricot, CaseWorthy) automate workflows. AI chatbots supplementary — Wysa has FDA Breakthrough Device status but for self-help, not clinical counseling. No AI tool performs bereavement counseling, art therapy, or pastoral care. Tools augment but don't replace. |
| Expert Consensus | 1 | NASW (Feb 2025): AI should augment, not replace. Oxford/Frey-Osborne rated counselors at low automation probability. APA (2026): AI fuels personalised mental health care as augmentation. Consensus tilts toward transformation rather than displacement — but less research attention on the niche specialties in this catch-all than on clinical mental health counseling. |
| Total | 0 |
Barrier Assessment
Reframed question: What prevents AI execution even when programmatically possible?
| Barrier | Score (0-2) | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory/Licensing | 1 | Licensing requirements vary dramatically. Some states require LPC for all counseling. Others have specialty-specific requirements (ATR for art therapy) or no mandatory licensure for pastoral/spiritual counselors. The Counseling Compact (interstate portability) applies primarily to LPC holders. Moderate barrier on average — not the universal strong licensure of clinical mental health counselors. |
| Physical Presence | 0 | Telehealth widely accepted for all counseling sub-types. Some art/music therapy benefits from in-person materials interaction, but this is not a structural physical barrier. |
| Union/Collective Bargaining | 0 | Minimal union representation. Most work in private practice, community nonprofits, hospice settings, or government agencies with at-will employment. |
| Liability/Accountability | 1 | Counselors carry professional liability and duty-of-care obligations. Mandatory reporting requirements for child/elder abuse apply. However, lower-stakes on average than licensed clinical counselors handling involuntary commitment or suicidal ideation. The "someone goes to prison" threshold is rarely reached in niche counseling specialties. |
| Cultural/Ethical | 1 | People seeking grief support, spiritual counsel, or creative arts therapy generally prefer a human. Cultural resistance is real but variable — some clients already use AI chatbots for mild emotional support. Less intense barrier than deep clinical mental health work, where crisis and vulnerability create stronger human-only expectations. |
| Total | 3/10 |
AI Growth Correlation Check
Confirmed 0 (Neutral). Demand for niche counseling specialties is driven by bereavement rates (ageing population), mental health awareness (post-COVID destigmatisation), creative arts therapy integration into healthcare settings, and spiritual/pastoral care needs — none of which are caused by AI adoption. AI chatbots may marginally handle low-acuity emotional support but do not create or destroy demand for specialised grief, art therapy, or pastoral counseling. This is not Accelerated Green — there is no recursive AI dependency.
JobZone Composite Score (AIJRI)
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Task Resistance Score | 3.40/5.0 |
| Evidence Modifier | 1.0 + (0 × 0.04) = 1.00 |
| Barrier Modifier | 1.0 + (3 × 0.02) = 1.06 |
| Growth Modifier | 1.0 + (0 × 0.05) = 1.00 |
Raw: 3.40 × 1.00 × 1.06 × 1.00 = 3.6040
JobZone Score: (3.6040 - 0.54) / 7.93 × 100 = 38.6/100
Zone: YELLOW (Green >=48, Yellow 25-47, Red <25)
Sub-Label Determination
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| % of task time scoring 3+ | 65% |
| AI Growth Correlation | 0 |
| Sub-label | Yellow (Urgent) — AIJRI 25-47 AND >=40% of task time scores 3+ |
Assessor override: None — formula score accepted. The 38.6 sits comfortably mid-Yellow (13.6 points above Red, 9.4 below Green) and calibrates well against the domain.
Assessor Commentary
Score vs Reality Check
The 38.6 score places this role firmly in Yellow (Urgent), well above the Red boundary and well below Green. This is honest for a BLS catch-all averaging across highly variable specialisms. Without barriers (3/10), the score would drop to ~36.2, so the classification is not barrier-dependent. The gap with Mental Health Counselor (69.6) is appropriate: that role has deeper clinical work (score 1 across 60% of tasks), stronger evidence (+8), and higher barriers (6/10). The gap with Social Workers, All Other (50.9) reflects that social workers have broader regulatory protection (LCSW required in most settings) and stronger evidence.
What the Numbers Don't Capture
- Extreme internal heterogeneity. A bereavement counselor working with families after traumatic loss would individually score Green (Transforming) — approaching the Mental Health Counselor profile at 69.6. An art therapist facilitating structured group workshops with mild-acuity clients would score deeper Yellow. The 38.6 average is honest as a category score but masks a bimodal distribution.
- Licensing fragmentation. Art therapists are only licensed in a handful of states. Pastoral counselors may have no state oversight at all. This variable regulatory landscape means some sub-types lack the barriers that protect clinical counselors, making them more vulnerable to displacement by AI self-help tools.
- Compensation ceiling limits market signals. The $40K-$56K median is among the lowest for roles requiring a master's degree. Wage stagnation may reflect funding constraints in community organisations and hospice settings rather than market devaluation — but it also limits the role's ability to attract and retain talent.
- Title rotation. Some counselors in this category are transitioning to more specific professional titles (e.g., "grief therapist," "expressive arts therapist," "board-certified music therapist") that may eventually receive their own BLS classification, shrinking the catch-all over time.
Who Should Worry (and Who Shouldn't)
Counselors working in bereavement, grief, complex art/music therapy, or crisis pastoral care — where emotional depth and human trust are central — are significantly safer than the 38.6 label suggests. Their work approaches the AI resistance of licensed mental health counselors. Counselors doing primarily structured psychoeducation, information-based workshops, or routine case coordination should pay close attention. AI platforms handle content generation, resource matching, and intake workflows with increasing competence. The single biggest factor separating the safe version from the at-risk version: whether clients come to you for the human relationship or for information and services. If they need a human to sit with them in grief, guide them through creative healing, or provide spiritual counsel in crisis — you are well-protected. If they primarily need structured guidance, resource referrals, or workshop content — AI is increasingly competitive.
What This Means
The role in 2028: Niche counselors will increasingly use AI for documentation, intake screening, and resource coordination — reducing administrative burden. The deeply interpersonal sub-types (bereavement, creative arts therapy, pastoral crisis care) will persist with minimal change, with AI handling paperwork while humans lead the relational work. The more structured, information-delivery sub-types will see AI absorbing significant workflow, potentially reducing headcount in agencies prioritising efficiency. Specialty certifications and clinical licensure will become more important for differentiation and protection.
Survival strategy:
- Specialise in emotionally complex or high-stakes counseling (bereavement, complex grief, trauma-informed art therapy) where the human relationship is the primary value
- Obtain the strongest available credentials for your specialism (LPC for clinical work, ATR-BC for art therapy, MT-BC for music therapy, CT for thanatology) to build regulatory protection and differentiate from unregulated AI alternatives
- Integrate AI documentation and case-management tools proactively — position yourself as the human who interprets and contextualises what AI surfaces, not someone competing with it on administrative tasks
Where to look next. If you are considering a career shift, these Green Zone roles share transferable skills with counseling:
- Mental Health Counselor (Mid-to-Senior) (AIJRI 69.6) — deepens the interpersonal skills you already have into licensed clinical practice; requires master's degree and supervised clinical hours
- Healthcare Social Worker (Mid-Level) (AIJRI 58.7) — applies assessment, care coordination, and advocacy skills in a hospital setting with stronger barriers and evidence
- Speech-Language Pathologist (Mid-Level) (AIJRI 55.1) — therapeutic relationship, treatment planning, and client assessment skills overlap; requires additional clinical training
Browse all scored roles at jobzonerisk.com to find the right fit for your skills and interests.
Timeline: 3-5 years. Driven by variable licensing that leaves some sub-types unprotected, neutral market evidence that provides no tailwind, and AI documentation/coordination tools already automating the administrative layer.