The long-held fear that AI and robotics will entirely replace human workers may be hitting a wall of practical reality. Today’s cutting-edge of automation isn’t replacing the whole human but absorbing their most mundane tasks.

That is the consensus from Dave Bozeman, chief executive of third-party logistics giant C.H. Robinson, and Peggy Johnson, chief executive of Agility Robotics, speaking Tuesday at Fortune Brainstorm Tech in Aspen, Colorado. While both executives acknowledged deep societal anxiety around job displacement, they argued that the immediate future belongs to so-called task augmentation, allowing humans to move higher up the value chain.

“We will have humans doing contact with customers, solving customers problems, and going up the value stack to really get their minds to work,” Bozeman said. “Agents are doing a lot of that upfront work.”

C.H. Robinson has rebuilt itself as a tech organization serving logistics, Bozeman said. It relies on an in-house team of 450 software engineers and data scientists to build bespoke tools. The pivot from legacy machine learning to generative AI has yielded a fleet of more than 30 specialized AI agents that executed millions of shipping tasks over the past year.