Stripe cofounder John Collison is 'bullish' on double majors being successful in the AI era

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Stripe President John Collison

John Collison cofounded the fintech company Stripe with his brother. Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Good news, students who have decided to double-major in college: Stripe cofounder John Collison predicts that the late nights, schedule juggling, and meticulous planning will be worth it in the age of AI.

Collison, who also serves as Stripe's president, said he's "bullish" on double majors and they "will do incredibly well over the next 10 to 20 years."

"If you understand software and understand marketing, you now can go massively improve the entire marketing funnel for your company," Collison said earlier this spring on the tech talk show TBPN. "Now, one person can do what would have taken 20 people dredging through all these systems."

Collison referenced the late Charlie Munger, who served as Berkshire Hathaway's vice chairman for over four decades and was Warren Buffett's business partner.

"Charlie Munger talked about the importance of being multidisciplinary and multidisciplinary thinking," Collison said. "He thinks getting a functional understanding of many disciplines is not that hard. You can just go read the books now or you can talk to your AI about it. I think multidisciplinary thinkers are going to do incredibly well."

The number of students choosing to double major is on the rise at many US universities amid job-security concerns, according to analysis published in The Hechinger Report in November.

A chart published by The Hechinger Report last year examining double-majors soaring at some universities.

A chart compiled by The Hechinger Report examining the increase in double-majors at many US universities.  Marina Villeneuve/The Hechinger Report

Collison also said "high-agency people" would also do well over the coming decades.

"The people at Stripe who have been talking to customers and know exactly what we should do. It's the people who have that pep in their step and want to go make Stripe better. They are so much more empowered thanks to AI," he said.

Advancements in AI are reshaping the workforce, changing how companies approach hiring and the skillsets employees are expected to have.

While AI optimists have said the technology can create new jobs and spur economic growth, a vocal segment of critics believes the opposite. AI can automate basic, repetitive tasks, raising concerns that entry-level jobs typically performed by humans will be overhauled by technology. Slowed hiring rates and layoffs earlier this year have also left some new college graduates in a lurch.

One major area of concern has been software engineering, which has been transformed as AI allows people to create code and programs faster than ever. However, there may be a light at the end of the tunnel. TrueUp, a tech job marketplace and recruiting platform, told Business Insider that tech job openings have risen almost 14% so far in 2026.

Collison, for his part, said people who think AI will herald the death of software engineering are mistaken.

"I think those people are high, honestly," Collison told TBPN.

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Lauren Edmonds is an award-winning reporter on the Business News team. When news isn't breaking, she covers personal finance, kitchen-table economics, and paths to financial freedom, including investing, real estate, side hustles, and small business. She also writes about guaranteed and universal basic income programs in the United States.Lauren has also covered lifestyle and entertainment, digital culture, and more. She has a master's degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and resides in New York City.Do you have an interesting story to tell? You can reach Lauren at [email protected] or on Signal at ledmonds0.07.Popular StoriesNetflix wants to be Disney when it grows up Why Hollywood is paying this 17-year-old up to $20,000 to boost film trailers with TikTok editsHere's all the free money Trump's talked about giving Americans during his second term — and where it all standsA 17-year-old earned $72,000 after investing his e-commerce profits into stocks. Here's why he bet on the tech industry.Lawmakers float a nationwide basic income experiment that would cover the cost of a 2-bedroom apartmentNearly 30,000 Americans have received about $335 million in basic income. Here are 5 takeaways. Americans ditch suffocating healthcare costs and divisive politics to retire in Italy: 'It's the way they approach life'From 'road-schooling' to gas that costs $500, this family of 4 shares what it's like living in a solar-powered Greyhound bus

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