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.