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.