TL; DR: Change Needs Glue People — Food for Agile Thought #540
Welcome to the 540th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,625 peers. This week, John Cutler warns that replacing “glue people” with AI ignores the invisible judgment and political navigation that made their work valuable, while Teresa Torres and Petra Wille suggest that resisting AI tool FOMO and focusing on real problems leads to deeper learning. Tugce Erten adds that enterprise buyers pick indispensable products over cheap ones, and Grant Harvey notes that Claude Opus 4.7’s visual reasoning gains come with quietly inflating costs. Stanford HAI’s 2026 AI Index confirms that capability is accelerating rapidly while governance trust crumbles globally, a dynamic Tom Geraghty roots in history: the 1628 Vasa disaster shows that when steep power gradients silence the people closest to the work, avoidable failures become inevitable.
Next, Clay Parker Jones reminds us that good ideas fail because of flawed organizational systems, not flawed thinking, while Roman Pichler and Jeff Gothelf both caution that AI-assisted prototyping and vibe coding cannot replace the discovery judgment at the core of product management. On the infrastructure side, Tomasz Tunguz reports GPU prices up 48% in two months, squeezing startups toward smaller models, as Beatrice Nolan covers growing user backlash over Anthropic quietly dialing back Claude’s default effort. Sarah Gibbons and Kate Moran close the loop: AI agents are already navigating interfaces as users, making accessibility a hard business requirement overnight.
Lastly, a worldwide survey of 425 B2B product managers confirms what many already suspect: strategy loses to operational reactivity, and discovery stays neglected. University of Pennsylvania researchers add a sharper edge, finding that 73% of participants accepted faulty AI reasoning without pushback, a pattern they call “cognitive surrender.” Kevin Kelly captures AI’s paradox with “dumbsmarten,” while Jeff Crume warns that teams rushing AI into production accumulate technical debt across data, models, prompts, and governance. Finally, the Andon Labs team hands their San Francisco retail store to an AI named Luna, surfacing uncomfortable questions about transparency and AI managing humans.