TL; DR: Choosing to Stay Human — Food for Agile Thought #546
Welcome to the 546th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,551 peers. This week, Anthropic shipped Claude Opus 4.8, which flags its uncertainty more readily, a fitting cue for Stephanie Leue, who argues no CPO embodies all nine roles a job description demands, so honest leaders name their gaps. Jeff Gothelf reframes agentic engineering as product management, since judgment outlasts typing. Ethan Mollick and Joanna Stern both warn that AI sharpens thinking only when you choose what to offload and when to stay human, while Jim Highsmith ties enterprise agility nowadays to human-centered leadership.
Next, Sachin Rekhi sees AI absorbing the coordination tax so PMs recover vision and taste, the craft Joe Martin lives at PostHog by shipping over consensus theater. Ruben Dominguez cautions that cheap AI only fired the starting gun, since context layers and EU AI Act compliance will be decisive in 2026. Simon Willison notes coding agents finding product-market fit, thus supporting IPO plans, though Laura Klein insists Walmart’s Sparky numbers prove nothing without a randomized test.
Lastly, Countryman, Oosterhuis, Wheless, and Afzal urge manufacturers to close the gap between executive AI optimism and worker distrust by training in the flow of real work. Martin Eriksson points to IKEA as an example for this, which reskilled 8,500 workers rather than cutting jobs. Tyler Cowen expects AI to reshape most roles, not erase them, while Johanna Rothman warns against outsourcing product thinking to stale LLMs, and Jim Lewis tested AI on usability research, finding mostly false alarms.
🎓 🇬🇧 The Claude Cowork Online Course — Available June 8-15 for $129
You have been prompting AI for months. The results are inconsistent, every conversation starts from zero, and the model forgets who you are. That is the ceiling of prompting.
The Claude Cowork Online Course teaches you to break through it: build Skills that encode your expertise, connect them to your tools, and assemble Agents who handle recurring work the way you would handle it yourself. No coding required.
What You Will Get:
✅ 8+ hours of self-paced video modules: Skills, Agents, delegation frameworks — ✅ Tested with a live BootCamp cohort (April 2026) — ✅ The A3 Framework: decide what to delegate and what to keep — ✅ Starter kit with folder structure, CLAUDE.md, and Skill templates — ✅ All texts, slides, prompts, graphics; you name it — ✅ Designed for the $20/month Pro plan — ✅ Lifetime access to the version you purchase — ✅ Claude Cowork Foundational Certificate.
👉 Please note: The course will be available for $129 from June 8 to 15, 2026! (After that, $199.) 👈
🎓 Join the Waitlist of the Course Now: Claude Cowork: Stop Prompting. Start Delegating. No Coding Required!
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🏆 The Tip of the Week: Choosing to Stay Human
(via Anthropic): Introducing Claude Opus 4.8
Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.8, a ‘modest step up‘ from Opus 4.7 at the same price. The headline change is honesty: the model flags uncertainty more readily and is roughly four times less likely to let code flaws slip by unremarked. It also adds user-facing effort controls and dynamic workflows.
🎯 Product
: The CPO role was designed for a person who doesn’t exist
Stephanie Leue suggests that a CPO job description lists nine different people, that no single human can be all of them, and that the leaders who grow are those who name their gaps honestly rather than perform completeness.
: Karpathy said vibe coding is obsolete. What he described instead is product management.
Jeff Gothelf takes Karpathy's "agentic engineering" checklist and shows it is product management in disguise. As AI handles typing, the real bottleneck becomes deciding what to build, and that judgment has always been the actual job.
: The Art of Product Management in the Age of AI
Sachin Rekhi suggests AI can absorb the coordination tax that hijacked product management, freeing PMs to return to the craft of vision, strategy, design, and execution where human taste still matters most.
(via PostHog): The do's and don'ts of minimum viable product marketing
Joe Martin shares PostHog's "minimum viable product marketing," an anti-framework prioritizing shipping over process. He favors clear announcements, conflict-driven storytelling, and meeting users where they are, while rejecting press releases, battlecards, and consensus-building theater.
🧠 Artificial Intelligence
: Choosing to Stay Human
Ethan Mollick examines how AI can shortcut thinking or sharpen it, citing studies showing that students using plain chatbots underperformed, while AI tutors boosted learning. Staying human means choosing intentionally what to offload.
: The Six AI Trends Defining 2026
Ruben Dominguez suggests cheap AI was never the finish line but the starting gun. The real 2026 divide lies in the compounding context layer, edge inference, and EU AI Act compliance that most teams ignore.
: I think Anthropic and OpenAI have found product-market fit
Simon Willison suggests OpenAI and Anthropic have finally found product-market fit through coding agents. Enterprise clients now pay full API rates, burning tokens fast, turning wild popularity into real, possibly profitable revenue.
(via Harvard Business Review): The Best Manufacturers Build AI with Workers, Not for Them
Countryman, Oosterhuis, Wheless, and Afzal suggest manufacturers close the gap between executive AI optimism and worker distrust by mapping roles with shop-floor input, training in the flow of real work, and measuring human-AI performance rather than hours logged.
(via McKinsey & Company): Author Talks: Testing AI’s limits in a one-year experiment
Author Joanna Stern spent a year embedding AI into work and family life. She found real benefits, but shadowed by data surveillance costs, and concluded that humans must still own judgment, thinking, and agency.
🖥 💯 🇬🇧 Claude Cowork BootCamp #2, June 10-July 2, 2026
You bought the Claude Pro subscription. You installed the desktop app. You pointed Cowork at a folder, watched it churn for thirty seconds, and got something that looked impressive but was not quite useful. You tried again. Same result.
Most people who try Claude Cowork get stuck in the same place. They do not know which of their tasks are good candidates for automation. They do not know how to build Skills that survive a second use. They do not know where the current limits sit. So they keep treating Cowork like a chat tool and miss the point of having an AI assistant who actually does the work.
The Claude Cowork BootCamp fixes that. In four hands-on sessions, you build working Skills and AI Agents during the sessions, not after. You leave with a compounding system, not a stack of prompts.
The Founding Cohort sold out in April 2026. Cohort #2 starts June 10, 2026.
A Note on Positioning: This BootCamp is built for knowledge workers who want to automate repetitive work with Claude Cowork. There is no Agile-specific content in the curriculum. The class is in English. 🇬🇧
Learn more: 🖥 💯 🇬🇧 Claude Cowork BootCamp #2, June 10-July 2, 2026 — No Coding Required.
Customer Voice: “Vijay Reddy, Principal SPC & AI Governance Lead: “Three weeks ago I could use AI. Today I can deploy it. The Cowork Bootcamp is the only AI training I have taken that shifted my thinking from ‘what can I prompt?’ to ‘what should I architect?’ — and that shift showed up immediately: on the same day as Session 3, I shipped a production AI research agent live at sagent.sai4rai.org, applying Stefan’s CLAUDE.md principles and the A3 Framework in real code, not just in exercises. I would recommend this to any agile coach, product manager, or practitioner who is tired of AI training that teaches tools but leaves you without a system for knowing when and how to actually delegate to AI at scale.” (Vijay Reddy, Founder & Executive Director, SAI4RAI.)
➿ Agile & Leadership
(via Lithespeed): Enterprise Agility in the Age of AI: Lessons from Leaders Navigating Change
Maggie Spivey draws on Lenka Pincot, Michael Carrel, and Jim Highsmith to suggest enterprise agility in the AI era depends less on frameworks and more on adaptive, human-centered leadership and continuous learning.
: AI is a Growth Lever. Most Companies Are Using It as a Cost Lever.
Martin Eriksson contrasts companies cutting headcount with AI against IKEA, which reskilled 8,500 service workers into design advisors after reading unresolved tickets, building a billion-euro business line. AI frees capacity for growth.
(via Fortune): Top economist Tyler Cowen on the biggest problem of the AI age: not mass unemployment but adjusting to a new reality
Tyler Cowen suggests AI will not bring mass unemployment but will change most jobs, with elite professionals losing status while those who take initiative win, making psychological adjustment the real challenge.
📯 'Write As Little Code As Possible' Was Always the Point. AI Just Made It Urgent.
Agentic coding tools have collapsed the friction of producing plausible software; output is no longer an issue. However, they have not collapsed the friction of knowing what is worth building, whether it fits the system, or whether users will change their behavior because of it, the much-desired outcome.
When generating plausible code becomes cheap, every hour spent building the wrong thing becomes waste that can now be produced at scale. Discovery, validation, product judgment, and verification are what stand between your team and creating expensive waste at high-speed.
Learn more: 'Write As Little Code As Possible' Was Always the Point. AI Just Made It Urgent.
🛠 Concepts, Practices, Tools & Measuring
: How Much Can You Trust an LLM to Tell You What Your Customers Want?
Johanna Rothman warns against outsourcing product thinking to LLMs trained on years-old data. Discovering what customers want requires human judgment, short feedback loops, and experiments that start from the actual problem.
(via Measuring Usability): Does AI Find Real UI Problems or Just Hallucinations?
Jim Lewis and colleagues tested whether AI catches real usability problems. Of eleven issues no human flagged, only one was genuine, seven false alarms, and three hallucinations. AI works only as a junior researcher needing oversight.
: Walmart says their AI investment is working. The metrics they presented don't actually show that.
Laura Klein dismantles Walmart's claim that its Sparky AI agent works, showing the 35% higher order value reflects self-selection, not causation. Without a randomized experiment, the metrics prove nothing.
📅 Scrum Training & Event Schedule
You can secure your seat for Scrum training classes, workshops, and meetups directly by following the corresponding link in the table below:
| Date | Class and Language | City | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🖥 💯 🇬🇧 June 8, 2026 | GUARANTEED: Claude Cowork: Stop Prompting. Start Delegating. (English; Self-paced Online Course) | Self-Paced Online Course | $129 incl. 19% VAT (If applicable.) |
| 🖥 💯 🇬🇧 June 9, 2026 | GUARANTEED: HoA 74: "CLAUDE.md" — The One File That Makes AI Remember How You Work. (English) | Meetup | FREE |
| 🖥 💯 🇬🇧 June 10-July 2, 2026 | GUARANTEED: Claude Cowork BootCamp #2 (English; Live Virtual Cohort) | Live Virtual Cohort | $249 incl. 19% VAT (If applicable.) |
| 🖥 💯 🇬🇧 June 11, 2026 | GUARANTEED: HoA 75: Token Economics. (English) | Meetup | FREE |
| 🇩🇪 June 30-July 1, 2026 | Professional Scrum Product Owner Training (PSPO I; German; Live Virtual Class) | Live Virtual Class | €1,299 incl. 19% VAT (If applicable.) |
| 🖥 💯 🇬🇧 July 1, 2026 | GUARANTEED: AI 4 Agile Course v3 — Master AI for Agile Practitioners (English; Self-paced Online Course) | Self-Paced Online Course | $149 incl. 19% VAT (If applicable.) |
See all upcoming classes here.
You can book your seat for the training directly by following the corresponding links to the ticket shop. If the procurement process of your organization requires a different purchasing process, please contact Berlin Product People GmbH directly.
📺 Join 6,000-plus Agile Peers on Youtube
Now available on the Age-of-Product YouTube channel to improve learning, for example, about how to Stay Human:
- Stop Writing Prompts. Let AI Do It for You — Hack #01, AI4Agile Online Course v2.
- Socratic Prompting — Hack #10, AI4Agile Online Course v2.
- Check Your AI’s Plan Before — Hack #7, AI4Agile Online Course v2.
- From Product Requirements to Experiments to Learnings — Supported by Generative AI.
- Never Accept an LLM’s First Offer — Improve GenAI’s Usefulness w/ Feedback Loops and Challenges.
✋ Do Not Miss Out: Learn more about How to Stay Human — Join the 20,000-plus Strong ‘Hands-on Agile’ Slack Community
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If you would like to join, all you have to do now is provide your credentials via this Google form, and I will sign you up. By the way, it’s free.
Help your team to learn about how AI Intensifies Work by pointing them to the free Scrum Anti-Patterns Guide: