Food for Agile Thought #525: Product Model Failures, Language of Money, AI Productivity Myths, Habits to Transform Systems

TL; DR: Product Model Failures — Food for Agile Thought #525

🎉 Happy 2026 and welcome to the 525th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,782 peers. This week, John Cutler warns product operating model failures when artifacts replace enabling conditions, while Stephanie Leue shows how reactive overload blocks real product work. Itamar Gilad critiques Google’s drift toward output over learning. Andrej Karpathy tracks 2025 LLM shifts reshaping who builds software, and Janelle Teng Wade examines AI’s power-law economics and fragile bets. Also, Mike Fisher uses Nokia to show how relentless change overwhelms the capacity for absorption and judgment.

Next, Marty Cagan and Elias Lieberich describe Google’s product model built on empowered teams, discovery, and outcomes at scale. Ant Murphy surveys 2026 product shifts and urges PMs to strengthen strategy and business judgment amid noisy AI adoption. Stephane Derosiaux questions AI productivity claims outside greenfield work, while Teresa Torres shares how she deliberately uses Claude Code, even for non-coding tasks. Andi Roberts distills Adam Kahane’s view of change through habits, experiments, and relationships.

Then, Johanna Rothman argues that culture shifts through stories, experiments, and flow metrics that improve decisions, not activity counts. Kevin Kelly reframes data as a commons that gains value through connection and shared governance, Sean Goedecke shows how complexity erodes system understanding over time, and Rich Mironov urges product leaders to speak in revenue terms. Finally, Jenn explains why sustainable meetups depend on organizer energy, clear norms, and intentional culture design.

Food for Agile Thought #525: Product Model Failures, Language of Money, AI Productivity Myths, Transform Systems — Age-of-Product.com
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The Immunity Response: How Organizations Neutralize Change

TL; DR: The Immunity Response and How the Principles Spread Anyway

Organizations resist change through immune responses: encapsulation, assimilation, exhaustion, redefinition, and expulsion. But immune systems attack what they recognize. Hence, if you are in the business of change and expect push-back, stop announcing transformations. Instead, to overcome the immunity response, start solving problems: The principles spread through practice, through demonstrations of value, not by proclamation.

This article is Part 3 of a three-part series. In Part 1, Agile Is Dead, Long Live Agility, we saw how the Agile brand became toxic while the principles spread faster than ever under different names. In Part 2, The Reformation That Became the Church, we traced how every disruptive movement hardens into the orthodoxy it opposed.

This final part answers the question we left open: Can you practice the principles without the apparatus? Yes. But only if you understand why organizations reject change and how to stop triggering that rejection.

The Immunity Response: How Organizations Neutralize Change And How the Principles Spread Anyway — Age-of-Product.com
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Food for Agile Thought #524: Irreplaceable Skills, Prototypes over PRD, Context Before Code, Deflation by AI

TL; DR: Irreplaceable Skills — Food for Agile Thought #524

🎄 Peaceful holidays and welcome to the 524th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,792 peers.

This week, Max Berry warns that AI is squeezing entry-level file work and forcing people to compete on accountable judgment, listing irreplaceable skills in the age of AI, while Stephen Dowling shows how Steve Sasson invented digital photography at Kodak long before the market could use it. John Cutler builds on that gap between idea and reality by separating operating model patterns from the operating system teams must actually design. Esther Derby adds that hierarchy blocks candor until risks grow teeth, and Simon Powers argues that change fails when tone and power stay untouched. Natalia Quintero ties it back to AI: teams stall without clear workflows and local champions.

Next, Theo Bleier shows how he lived inside Notion sales workflows, removed copy-paste friction, then used product signals to improve account prioritization with humans in the loop. Tomasz Tunguz spots AI deflation as Gemini 3 Flash cuts costs while staying close to benchmarks, and Michael Wall treats ChatGPT Pro as a first hire to ship software and run his music business. Also, Chris Matts warns that DORA metrics backfire when executives weaponize them, and Shreyas Doshi rejects slogans and pushes situational judgment.

Then, Peter Hunter and Elena Stojmilova show how Open GI escaped a monolith by decentralizing architecture with Team Topologies, a DDD context map, ADRs, and an open advisory forum. Ianemmanuel Crueldad pushes back on agentic AI when deterministic automation works better and fails less, while Emma Webster favors high-fidelity prototypes over PRDs to align and validate fast. Lizzie Matusov links daily stand-ups to psychological safety and performance. Finally, Austin Tedesco uses AI to compress planning through shared context and iterative drafts.

📅 Programming Note: Food for Agile Thought #525 will be available on January 4, 2026.

Food for Agile Thought #524: Irreplaceable Skills, Prototypes over PRD, Context Before Code, Deflation by AI — Age-of-Product.com
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The Reformation That Became the Church

TL, DR: The Reformation That Became the Church

The Agile Manifesto followed Luther’s Reformation arc: radical simplicity hardened into scaling frameworks, transformation programs, and debates about what counts as “real Agile.” Learn to recognize when you’re inside the orthodoxy and how to practice the principles without the apparatus.

This is Part 2 of a three-part series; check out Part 1: Agile Is Dead, Long Live Agility.

The Reformation That Became the Church: How Every Disruptive Movement Hardens Into the Orthodoxy It Opposed — Age-of-Product.com
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Food for Agile Thought #523: Career Success Factors, Product People Myths, Building in Public, GPT-5.2

TL; DR: Career Success Factors — Food for Agile Thought #523

Welcome to the 523rd edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,802 peers. This week, Addy Osmani reflects on 14 years at Google, showing how user focus, clear thinking, and steady learning are true career success factors. Janna Bastow pushes back on traditional roadmaps, urging teams to ditch false certainty in favor of action-based planning. Elena Verna and Jonathan Yagel make the case for Building in Public as a trust-building engine. Meanwhile, technicalities warns of uneven AI progress, and Tim Tully et al. see a durable AI boom shaping enterprise adoption.

Next, Roman Pichler urges product teams to lead themselves, stressing shared ownership, clear authority, and skilled coaching. Joshua Seiden reframes AI-savvy product managers as translators, not engineers. OpenAI launches GPT-5.2, highlighting faster reasoning, vision, and tool use. Gavin Baker and Patrick O’Shaughnessy break down AI infrastructure ROI as a game of tokens, cycles, and execution. Shreyas Doshi demystifies micromanagement by showing when it blocks progress and when it clarifies expectations.

Then, OpenAI highlights a widening performance gap as enterprise AI adoption deepens. John Cutler urges teams to map real operating dynamics rather than cling to neat hierarchies. Cris Beswick warns that innovation needs intentional slack, not overworked teams, and Peter Yang offers practical tips for generating consistent, brand-aligned AI visuals. Finally, Erik Thorsell breaks down why estimates frustrate developers and matter to product owners, calling for transparency over false precision.

Food for Agile Thought #523: Career Success Factors, Product People Myths, Building in Public, GPT-5.2 — Age-of-Product.com
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Agile Is Dead, Long Live Agility

TL; DR: Why the Brand Failed While the Ideas Won

Your LinkedIn feed is full of it: Agile is dead. They’re right. And, at the same time, they’re entirely wrong.

The word is dead. The brand is almost toxic in many circles; check the usual subreddits. But the principles? They’re spreading faster than ever. They just dropped the name that became synonymous with consultants, certifications, transformation failures, and the enforcement of rituals.

You all know organizations that loudly rejected “Agile” and now quietly practice its core ideas more effectively than any companies running certified transformation programs. The brand failed. The ideas won.

So why are we still fighting about the label?

Agile Is Dead, Long Live Agility: Why the Brand Failed While the Ideas Won — by Stefan Wolpers of Age-of-Product.com.
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