Food for Agile Thought #540: Change Needs Glue People, AI Tool FOMO, Product Builders, Stanford’s 2026 AI Report

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.

Food for Agile Thought #540: Change Needs Glue People, AI Tool FOMO, Product Builders, Stanford’s 2026 AI Report - Age-of-Product.com
Continue reading Food for Agile Thought #540: Change Needs Glue People, AI Tool FOMO, Product Builders, Stanford’s 2026 AI Report

Food for Agile Thought #539: Sam Altmann? Bottom-Up Roadmaps, Cycles of Disruption, The Last Four Jobs

TL; DR: Sam Altmann — Food for Agile Thought #539

Welcome to the 539th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,623 peers. This week, Ronan Farrow and Andrew Marantz investigate Sam Altman’s leadership at OpenAI, exposing a pattern of deception and safety trade-offs, while Ajeya Cotra predicts AI research parity could arrive by 2028, and Annie Vella reports from a retreat where nobody had AI figured out yet. On the product side, Stephanie Leue questions why leaders borrow other people’s styles instead of finding their own, and Janna Bastow warns that backlog-driven roadmaps create an illusion of progress. Also, Maarten Dalmijn proposes that fewer rules and better guardrails unlock real team performance.

Next, Packy McCormick warns against lazily comparing AI labs to Amazon, since these companies face direct competitors running nearly identical strategies. Tomasz Tunguz offers a 2×2 matrix that helps leaders sort AI strategy work by demand ceiling and loop type, and Itamar Gilad explores why product discovery keeps breaking down internally and proposes that teams time-box it but never skip it. On the technical side, Zvi Mowshowitz covers Anthropic’s Claude Mythos model, which found critical security vulnerabilities across every major OS and browser. Paweł Huryn breaks down Claude Code pricing after Anthropic cut third-party access, and Gergely Orosz hosts Kent Beck and Martin Fowler as they trace parallels between past tech disruptions and today’s AI shift, including why TDD matters more now than ever.

Lastly, John Cutler suggests that AI won’t fix broken product funnels but will amplify whatever dynamics already exist, and Jeff Gothelf warns that SAFe’s rigid ceremonies become catastrophic because AI development demands rapid hypothesis testing. Yoni Rechtman envisions AI-native companies organizing around four archetypes instead of traditional roles, and Kyle Poyar identifies five storytelling archetypes that cut through AI-generated noise. Finally, Jenny Wanger reminds us that offshore team frustrations run both ways and that trust, not process documentation, is the actual fix.

Food for Agile Thought #539: Sam Altmann? Bottom-Up Roadmaps, Cycles of Disruption, The Last Four Jobs – Age-of-Product.com
Continue reading Food for Agile Thought #539: Sam Altmann? Bottom-Up Roadmaps, Cycles of Disruption, The Last Four Jobs

Food for Agile Thought #538: Product Strategy Drift, Your Team Is Too Big, Benefits of Constraints, Vibe Coding Best Practices

TL; DR: Vibe Coding Best Practices — Food for Agile Thought #538

Welcome to the 538th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,647 peers. This week, Teresa Torres shows non-engineers how to embrace vibe coding best practices, for example, by upfront Markdown planning and a separate review agent, while Ethan Mollick identifies interface design, not model capability, as AI’s real bottleneck. Lenny Rachitsky interviews Simon Willison on why November 2025 marks AI’s inflection point and why mid-career engineers face the greatest displacement risk. David Pereira and Jason Knight, Janna Bastow, and Saeed Khan all warn that product managers lean on AI to ship faster while abandoning discovery and strategy, and Maarten Dalmijn reminds us that deliberately chosen constraints are what make great products possible.

Next, Martin Eriksson warns that strategy drift is silent, with executives believing they are 82% aligned, while actual alignment sits at just 23%, and Kyle Poyar adds that AI agents are becoming B2B buyers who will actively disqualify products with opaque pricing and “contact sales” CTAs. Viktor Cessan argues that LLMs are exposing large codebases and headcounts as liabilities. Also, Jack Dorsey, Roelof Botha, and Joost Minnaar each propose that AI makes traditional hierarchies obsolete in favor of small, autonomous, radically transparent teams. Jeff Gothelf rounds things out by offering a four-dimensional rubric to make product judgment visible and teachable as AI collapses execution costs.

Lastly, Nate Herk extracts eight practical insights from the leaked Claude Code source code, from hidden slash commands to multi-agent architecture, and Sachin Rekhi outlines ten AI-powered discovery workflows that accelerate customer research without replacing human judgment. Janelle Teng sees Physical AI approaching an inflection point as six catalysts converge, and Tristan Kromer frames the gap between AI deployment and business impact as a practice problem, mapping six maturity levels from passive consumer to multi-agent architect. Finally, Tracy St.Dic shows how Zapier has already operationalized that shift by raising its hiring bar to require embedded AI use and provable adoption leadership.

Food for Agile Thought #538: Product Strategy Drift, Your Team Is Too Big, Benefits of Constraints, Vibe Coding Practices - Age-of-Product.com
Continue reading Food for Agile Thought #538: Product Strategy Drift, Your Team Is Too Big, Benefits of Constraints, Vibe Coding Best Practices

Food for Agile Thought #537: AutoResearch in Your Sleep, CPO-CTO Alignment Tax, Autonomy Is Overrated, Synthetic Personas

TL; DR: AutoResearch in Your Sleep — Food for Agile Thought #537

Welcome to the 537th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,652 peers. This week, Andrej Karpathy and Aakash Gupta explore how AI agents are reshaping digital work through autonomous multi-agent workflows and autoresearch loops that run 100 automated improvement cycles overnight. Shifting to team dynamics, Christina Wodtke sees the friction between frontline teams and management as a perspective problem across abstraction levels, while Stephanie Leue warns that polite CPO-CTO misalignment costs far more than the honest conversation both parties avoid. Maarten Dalmijn adds that autonomy without alignment creates silos, not freedom, and Jerry Neumann challenges the entire startup methodology canon, proposing that widely adopted frameworks like Lean Startup become self-defeating the moment everyone uses them.

Next, Sachin Rekhi maps out 15 AI prototyping skills product managers need to shift how teams prioritize roadmaps, and Tim O’Reilly warns the agentic economy still lacks the infrastructure to prevent single-gatekeeper capture. Anthropic researchers Massenkoff, Lyubich, and McCrory find that experienced Claude users tackle harder tasks with higher success rates as usage diversifies. Also, Margaret-Anne Storey identifies cognitive and intent debt as two underappreciated costs of AI-generated code, and Ruben Hassid demonstrates Claude’s new computer use feature for autonomous multi-step Mac workflows.

Lastly, Paweł Huryn documents 74 Claude releases in 52 days, signaling a widening competitive gap. At the same time, Ian Vanagas shares PostHog’s hard-won lessons on when product context beats flashy agent capabilities. Tristan Kromer warns that synthetic personas sharpen interview guides but cannot replace real customer discovery, and Bandan Singh proposes letting direct reports lead 1:1s before managers add their topics. Finally, Allan Kelly believes Agile’s decline stems from the community’s own retreat from in-person learning.

Food for Agile Thought #537: AutoResearch , CPO-CTO Alignment Tax, Autonomy Is Overrated, Synthetic Personas - Age-of-Product.com
Continue reading Food for Agile Thought #537: AutoResearch in Your Sleep, CPO-CTO Alignment Tax, Autonomy Is Overrated, Synthetic Personas

Food for Agile Thought #536: POM Starter Pack, Product Leadership Guide, What People Want from AI, Claude Skills Playbook

TL; DR: POM Starter Pack — Food for Agile Thought #536

Welcome to the 536th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,661 peers. This week, Anthropic’s 81,000-person study reveals that hope and alarm about AI coexist within the same individual. Alberto Romero channels that tension into eight practical strategies for AI career anxiety, while Allan Kelly warns that today’s AI hype mirrors the 1990s BPR failures. On the product side, Teresa Torres walks teams through measuring real customer impact rather than shipping features, Janna Bastow proposes that fixing bugs and technical debt is the strategy, and the Dotwork team provides a POM starter pack to operationalize Marty Cagan’s Product Operating Model.

Next, David Pereira suggests that product leadership means creating space for product managers to thrive, not being the smartest person in the room. Steve Blank warns that startups older than 2 years are likely running obsolete playbooks in a world reshaped by AI agents and vibe coding. Also, Ruben Dominguez highlights Claude’s 14x revenue jump and proposes that the real productivity gap lies in learning to co-work with AI. Cedric Chin recommends ignoring AI predictions and studying actual field reports instead, while Dave Snowden reminds us that Boyd’s OODA loop was never meant to be a safe iteration cycle.

Then, Jeff Gothelf proposes that storytelling is now the product manager’s key competitive advantage as AI commoditizes standard PM artifacts. Tristan Kromer addresses the lack of memory in AI agents. He proposes building a RAG-based experiment knowledge base to compound learning rather than repeat it. Martin Eriksson adds that AI agents need the same strategic clarity as human teams or organizations will scale confusion at machine speed. Finally, Sharyph explains how Claude Code Skills 2.0 turns Claude into a personalized, testable workflow system, while Deloitte’s 2026 State of AI report finds that only 34% of organizations truly reimagine their business with AI despite rising access.

Food for Agile Thought #536: POM Starter Pack, Product Leadership Guide, AI: What People Want, Claude Skills Playbook - Age-of-Product.com
Continue reading Food for Agile Thought #536: POM Starter Pack, Product Leadership Guide, What People Want from AI, Claude Skills Playbook

Food for Agile Thought #535: AI’s Labor Market Impact, Killing Your Darlings, Discovery Failures, Learned Helplessness

TL; DR: AI’s Labor Market Impact — Food for Agile Thought #535

Welcome to the 535th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,669 peers. This week, Ethan Mollick explores AI’s shift from co-intelligence to managing autonomous agents, urging organizations to experiment now. Jing Hu counters the “AI is bigger than Covid” panic by exposing the gap between theoretical and actual AI adoption, while Massenkoff and McCrory back this up with data on AI’s labor market impact showing no systematic rise in unemployment yet. Teresa Torres and Petra Wille warn that mediocre product success traps teams, Johanna Rothman offers team-based approaches to shaping unclear backlogs, and Joost Minnaar shows why removing hierarchy fails without investing in human capability.

Next, Aatir Abdul Rauf identifies seven headwinds AI product teams face after shipping, from margin erosion to trust gaps. At the same time, Sasha Rogelberg reports on BCG’s “AI brain fry” study, which shows that piling on AI tools hurts productivity and drives turnover. On a practical note, Ruben Hassid walks you through setting up Claude as your primary AI tool. Itamar Gilad traces product discovery failures to “must-have” features that bypass validation and to weak goals, and Tim Harford warns that quantified metrics quietly strip away context, autonomy, and genuine judgment.

Then, Olivia Moore tracks the intensifying race for the “default AI” in her sixth edition of the top 100 gen AI consumer apps. Jeff Gothelf proposes that customer relationships, not features, are the last defensible advantage, and Chris Walker identifies “context engineering” as a durable bottleneck preserving a role for local domain expertise. Justin Jackson examines how AI coding tools blur the roles of engineers, PMs, and designers, and suggests pair programming as a remedy. Lastly, David Burkus wraps things up with practical advice on leading difficult conversations with curiosity rather than accusation.

Food for Agile Thought #535: AI's Labor Market Impact, Killing Your Darlings, Discovery Failures, Learned Helplessness - Age-of-Product.com
Continue reading Food for Agile Thought #535: AI’s Labor Market Impact, Killing Your Darlings, Discovery Failures, Learned Helplessness