Food for Agile Thought #517: The AI Boom-or-Bust Situation, Project vs. POM Debate, Testing Business Ideas, Agile’s Future?

TL; DR: AI Boom-or-Bust Situation — Food for Agile Thought #517

Welcome to the 517th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 40,352 peers. This week, Grant Harvey dissects the AI boom-or-bust situation, warning of inflated valuations built on shaky economics. Petra Wille urges teams to switch deliberately between product and project thinking, guided by feedback loops, and John Cutler skewers empty calls for simplification that mask vague agendas and stalled change. Len Greski declares the “Agile” brand broken but defends its principles, while David Pereira’s chat with David J. Bland highlights lessons learned and why systems thinking now takes center stage.

Next, Maarten Dalmijn highlights how delaying decisions can preserve options and reduce regret. Raghav Sethi critiques AI bloat in products, eroding trust. Richard Mironov warns of inflated AI valuations and urges sharper judgment. At the same time, Eli Pariser reports from a private AI summit where hype meets unease. Also, Johanna Rothman reminds us that truth-telling requires cultural permission and consistent leadership.

Lastly, Jeremy Korst, Stefano Puntoni, and Sonny Tambe show that generative AI delivers ROI at scale, though skills still lag. Teresa Torres explains how Claude Code lets non-technical users build reusable AI workflows, and Maik Seyfert exposes the illusion of team autonomy rooted in structural control. Also, Mark Levison targets bloated backlogs with story maps. Finally, Nadzeya Stalbouskaya urges leaders to treat architectural debt as a strategic risk rather than hide it under the label of technical debt.

Food for Agile Thought #517: AI Boom-or-Bust Situation, Project vs. POM Debate, Testing Business Ideas, Agile’s Future? Age-of-Product.com
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Food for Agile Thought #516: Sabotaging AI, Feature Flags for Discovery, AI Slop Field Guide, Upskilling Teams

TL; DR: Sabotaging AI — Food for Agile Thought #516

Welcome to the 516th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 40,359 peers. This week, Jenn Spykerman addresses unknowingly sabotaging AI according to a 1944 manual, masquerading endless committees, perfectionism, and cautious delays as good governance. Leah Tharin challenges claims that LLMs can stand in for real customer insight, warning that dashboards can fuel strategy theater, while John Cutler connects prioritization to strategic leverage and power dynamics. Jing Hu reframes AI failure stats as early-stage noise, and Duncan Brown warns that AI favors the visible over the messy, human glue that makes effective teams work.

Next, Chetan Kapoor shows how eBay uses feature flags as discovery tools to validate demand early and surface usability issues. Kyle Poyar critiques popular SaaS pricing models and shares fixes that avoid complete overhauls. Ethan Mollick maps the current AI landscape with practical guidance on tools, tiers, and tactics. At the same time, Zvi Mowshowitz highlights key takeaways from Karpathy’s AGI views, and James Shore reframes engineering accountability through product bets instead of features and deadlines.

Lastly, Anthropic’s Claude receives “skills” as modular guides for specialized tasks, now open-sourced on GitHub. One author explores how great teams grow through targeted support and bold delegation, and Jeff Sauro and Jim Lewis dissect NPS claims, separating useful signals from misleading noise. Charlie Guo calls out the creeping signs of AI-generated content and its cost to authenticity. Finally, Karen Dahut presents Google Skills, a vast new learning platform for AI and tech upskilling.

Food for Agile Thought #516: Sabotaging AI, Feature Flags for Discovery, AI Slop Field Guide, Upskilling Teams — Age-of-Product.com
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The Dangerous Middle: Agile Roles That AI Will Erode First

TL; DR: Dangerous Middle and the Future of Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches

Peter Yang, a renowned product leader, argues that AI will split product roles into two groups: Generalists who can prototype end-to-end with AI, and specialists in the top 5% of their fields. Everyone else in the dangerous middle risks being squeezed.

How does this apply to agile practitioners: Scrum Masters, Product Owners, Agile Coaches, and transformation leads? It does, with important nuances.

The Dangerous Middle: Peter Yang's Product Role Framework Reveals About the Future of Agile Practitioners — Age-of-Product.com
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Food for Agile Thought #515: Poor Decisions by Managers, LLMs Getting Dumber, POM Explained, AI Zombie Projects

TL; DR: Poor Decisions by Managers — Food for Agile Thought #515

Welcome to the 515th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 40,381 peers. This week, Henrik Mårtensson explores six decision-making traps managers fall into and how to overcome poor decisions with candor and deliberate practice. Janna Bastow highlights how skipping feasibility checks sabotages product delivery, offering lightweight tactics for trust and clarity in the AI era. Also, Teresa Torres and Petra Wille explore how product leaders shape their legacy through their impact, values, and reflection. Meanwhile, Jacob Poushter and team find AI anxiety outweighs optimism, and Maarten Dalmijn warns how process bloat kills team ownership.

Next, Melissa Suzuno outlines how product operating models shift focus from outputs to outcomes, scaling through pilot teams and leadership support. Roger Snyder addresses the tension between PM and PO, emphasizing the importance of alignment on purpose, ownership, and cadence, while Charlie Guo examines LLM performance drift, providing mitigation strategies. Barry O’Reilly lists 21 signs your AI project might be undead, and Martin Eriksson warns that empowerment fails without a strategic context and a deliberate shift in leadership stance.

Lastly, Pawel Brodzinski warns that autonomous AI agents lack the trust needed for broad adoption without transparency and alignment. Jens Meyer critiques veto-heavy cultures and calls for genuine accountability, where saying yes means accepting the outcome. Also, Emily Webber shares tips on selecting meaningful icebreakers that promote safety and connection, and Steve Blank defends science as the engine of innovation. Finally, Matt Kamelman stresses that smart AI starts with context, not just more data.

Food for Agile Thought #515: Poor Decisions by Managers, LLMs Getting Dumber, POM Explained, AI Zombie Projects — Age-of-Product.com
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Food for Agile Thought #514: State of AI Report 2025, Stakeholder Management, What Breaks Product Decisions, 25 Years of XP

TL; DR: State of AI Report 2025 — Food for Agile Thought #514

Welcome to the 514th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 40,403 peers. This week, Nathan Benaich’s State of AI Report 2025 highlights advancements in reasoning, China’s momentum, massive compute, sharper geopolitics, and a pragmatic shift toward reliability and governance. Jenny Wanger offers a hands-on way to surface implicit strategy through learner-mode interviews, drafting, and iterative feedback, while John Cutler tackles product-centricity in non-digital firms, urging a networked operating model that links funding, intent, collaboration, architecture, and outcomes. Nino Paoli notes Citi’s prompt training push while warning that real impact needs ongoing upskilling and integration. Additionally, Maarten Dalmijn highlights trust as the actual bottleneck that must be addressed before AI can effectively amplify execution.

Next, Roman Pichler sharpens stakeholder management with a power-interest focus, trust building, early involvement, and NVC for real conflict resolution. David Pereira draws out Ryan Singer on keeping six-week bets lean through framing, alignment, and timely founder input, while David Shapiro challenges “AI pilot failure” myths, focusing on integration and governance issues. Then, Sangeet Paul Choudary shifts AI agent talk to coordination and standards, and Dave Rooney marks 25 years of XP, calling for TDD, pairing, CD, and lean flow.

Lastly, Casey Newton probes OpenAI’s platform push, weighing integrations against privacy, incentives, and trust. Teresa Torres urges teams to own interview synthesis, then use AI to spot cross-patterns without losing empathy or skill. Sean Goedecke demonstrates that staff engineers can influence politics by aligning momentum and delivering visible wins, and Shane Hastie and Marcos Arribas share culture-at-scale practices from autonomy to right-sized quality. Finally, Anton Zaides advocates ruthless meeting hygiene to protect deep engineering flow.

Food for Agile Thought #514: State of AI Report 2025, Stakeholder Management, What Breaks Product Decisions, XP at 25 — Age-of-Product.com
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Food for Agile Thought #513: No AI-Disruption, Building Influence as a PM, 2025 Product Metrics, Against Generative AI

TL; DR: No AI-Disruption — Food for Agile Thought #513

Welcome to the 513th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 40,441 peers. This week, Martha Gimbel, Molly Kinder, Joshua Kendall, and Maddie Lee report that there have been no economy-wide AI-disruption of the labor market since 2022 and call for better usage data. Maarten Dalmijn warns AI sped shipping bloats products and urges subtraction-minded PMs. Brian Balfour and Lauryn Motamedi rethink SaaS pricing by leveraging system-level levers and providing customer education. Also, Ethan Mollick shows near-expert AI agents shifting tasks under expert oversight, and Naval Ravikant advocates for iterative simplification and clear ownership.

Next, Chad McAllister interviews Rich Mironov on product leadership that speaks revenue, merchandises wins, cuts waste, and mentors for pragmatic team design. At the same time, Jana Paulech cautions against endless discovery and advocates simple, hypothesis-led research tied to business goals. Edward Zitron argues the generative AI boom is a fragile, Nvidia-dependent bubble. Leah Tharin spotlights 2025 benchmarks where activation speed drives retention, and OpenAI unveils GDPval, expert-graded tasks showing frontier models nearing expert quality.

Lastly, Jing Hu reports research showing that AIs favor AI-written content by 60 to 95 percent, urging audits of AI gatekeepers and strategic polishing without compromising human judgment. Seth Godin frames AI as infrastructure, shifting value to ambition, taste, and community. John Cutler, on the other hand, warns against comforting narratives, urging leaders to co-author cause-and-effect stories and surface risks early. Finally, Barry O’Reilly rejects maturity models, favoring outcome metrics, experiments, coaching, and DORA-like measures.

Food for Agile Thought #513: No AI-Disruption, Building Influence as a PM, 2025 Product Metrics, Against Generative AI — Age-of-Product.com
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