TL;DR: Write As Little Code As Possible and Agentic Coding
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.
Thesis: AI made generating code cheap enough that weak product judgment can now scale. That is the problem this article addresses.
TL; DR: Agentic Chaos — Food for Agile Thought #545
Welcome to the 545th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,577 peers. This week, Natalie Shapira et al. reveal how autonomous LLM agents leak information, spoof identities, and falsely report task completion when red-teamed in a live lab, a finding that sharpens the question Charlene Li raises with David Burkus: AI transformation fails when CEOs hand it off to IT because the real challenge is behavioral, not technical. April Dunford picks up the strategic thread, urging companies to rethink their positioning by forming a clear point of view about the future rather than chasing speed. Petra Wille echoes that theme in an interview with Jason Knight, arguing product leadership itself demands deliberate development, not just promotion. And while Peter Saddington declares AI has inverted every value of the Agile Manifesto, McKinsey doubles down on industrial thinking with an “AI assembly line” that decomposes knowledge work into standardized agent tasks.
Next, Ant Murphy reframes prioritization as a layered chain of decisions flowing from vision to outcomes, not a backlog exercise, while Petra Wille challenges product leaders to resist AI hype and take responsibility for shaping a future worth living in. Paweł Huryn offers a practical tool for that effort with PM Brain OS, an open-source second brain built on markdown and Claude Code. Yet building reliable AI systems remains elusive: Swarnendu Bhattacharya reports that 88% of AI agent projects fail because teams rely on prompts rather than deterministic constraints, and Andon Labs proved the point by giving four AI models their own radio stations only to watch them develop wild personalities while ignoring the business side entirely.
Lastly, Barry O’Reilly argues that AI reassembles tasks within jobs rather than replacing them, shifting value from routine friction to better judgment, a theme Seth Godin extends by urging people to use machines for leverage rather than competing against them. John Cutler reminds us that even defining teams honestly is hard because it exposes power structures that organizations prefer to ignore. Shreshta Shyamsundar and Anmol Jain push further, proposing an agentic P&L that replaces headcount with cognitive outcomes. Finally, Itamar Gilad challenges hyped AI PM archetypes in favor of one who improves all company functions, not just coding.
TL;DR: Why A Former Micromanager Will Make AI Adoption Work
Twenty years of agile coaching failed to fix the micromanager who meddles with every draft, every meeting, every decision. This article shows where their distrust stops damaging teams and starts producing the verification work AI adoption actually needs. Welcome the Verification Architect!
TL; DR: Knowledge Work Tools in 2026 — Food for Agile Thought #544
Welcome to the 544th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,582 peers. This week, Taylor Pearson locates the real leverage of AI knowledge work tools in context-rich scaffolding that encodes local knowledge, a thesis Teresa Torres demonstrates in practice by fixing AI-generated Opportunity Solution Trees through agentic validation loops. Simon Willison watches that same agent reliability erode his own code-review discipline, and Bedard et al. name the resulting cognitive cost “AI brain fry.” Stephanie Leue and Len Greski shift the lens from individuals to systems: she with her 40/40/20 alignment rule, he with 90-day outcome-tied funding cycles.
Next, Aakash Gupta and Pawel Huryn argue that PMs should build a self-improving AI operating system instead of treating Claude Chat as the main interface, an investment in compounding leverage that Jeff Gothelf warns can backfire when AI-generated MVPs outpace the team’s ability actually to learn from customers. Allan Kelly looks to Ukraine for evidence that mission command and motivated teams beat rigid planning under real constraints, while Mike Fisher applies Grant’s wolf-counting lesson to deflate SaaS doomsday narratives. Also, the DORA team grounds the broader AI ROI debate in organizational maturity rather than tool choice.
Lastly, Kyle Poyar shows practitioners how to package 15 years of GTM expertise into reusable Claude skill files for research, pricing, and ICP work, the kind of individual leverage Robert Glaser warns rarely scales into organizational learning without his proposed “Loop Intelligence.” Ara Kharazian reports that Anthropic has overtaken OpenAI in business adoption at 34.4%, though cost and reliability cloud the lead. Finally, Grant Harvey finds organizations, not workers, are the real AI bottleneck, while James Shore models how unchecked coding-agent output quietly doubles maintenance debt.
TL;DR: Understand the Claude Desktop Architecture and Save Time
You configured Claude in Claude Desktop, wrote instructions, uploaded reference files, and set your preferences. Then you clicked the Cowork tab.
Unfortunately, Claude had no memory of what you just did. Your instructions were gone, as were your files and preferences. You assumed this was a bug, but it is a feature: You switched applications.
TL; DR: AI Playbook, Product Taste — Food for Agile Thought #543
Welcome to the 543rd edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,597 peers. This week, John Cutler warns in his AI Playbook that AI accelerates broken practices just as much as good ones, while Guy Champniss adds that the psychological toll of AI adoption on employee motivation may quietly erase the productivity gains organizations expect. Teresa Torres and Petra Wille challenge the rising “taste” narrative in product management, proposing that discovery skills and evidence beat gut feeling. David Pereira diagnoses why product management in Europe often underperforms, pointing to roadmap theater and consensus paralysis, and Laura Klein reminds us that involving engineers in research builds shared understanding faster than any handoff ever could.
Next, Andrej Karpathy describes how software development is shifting from vibe coding to agentic engineering, where judgment and architectural understanding matter more than writing code, and Cedric Chin offers three techniques for making sense of AI without losing your current frame. Also, Richard Kasperowski reminds us that CEOs never cared about Scrum, only results, and that AI raises the bar on engineering fundamentals. Paweł Huryn shows how Claude Design compresses product discovery from weeks to hours, and Wyndo and Dheeraj Sharma walk through building a competitor intelligence agent that develops editorial judgment over time.
Lastly, Jake Handy warns that executives mistake AI token consumption for productivity, while Paul LaPosta shows how AI-generated code inflates DORA metrics by boosting speed while eroding system understanding. Jack Clark raises the stakes further, estimating a 60%+ chance of fully automated AI R&D by 2028. Jim Lewis, Jeff Sauro, and colleagues find that AI usability evaluations catch only half the problems humans identify while generating unverified issues on top. Finally, Mike Fisher reminds us that belonging is not a soft perk but a measurable performance driver, built or destroyed one manager interaction at a time.