Your team ships AI outputs that nobody fully trusts; you needed to be quick, and “dirty” tagged along. That ungoverned automation becomes AI debt the moment a stakeholder asks who owns it. The AI Delegation Lifecycle turns six agile skills you already practice into six explicit decisions that govern delegated AI work and produce audit-ready evidence without a separate report.
TL; DR: ROT (Return on Tokens) — Food for Agile Thought #548
Welcome to the 548th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,528 peers. This week, Packy McCormick and Markie Wagner call token maxing wasteful: AI should compile processes into code, not burn tokens at runtime; ROT (return on tokens) is essential. Deb Liu warns that chasing efficiency gains only builds a faster treadmill, while Elena Verna insists companies need employees with agency, not more agents. Roman Pichler centers emotional intelligence as the capability AI cannot replicate, Jenny Wanger swaps team health scorecards for structured conversations, and Grant Harvey examines who controls Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5.
Next, Gary Marcus questions whether AI IPOs resemble early Amazon or history’s largest capital misallocation. At the same time, Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor argue that AI only compresses execution, not decision-making, leaving engineers irreplaceable. Gaurav Savla offers PMs a practical playbook for shipping AI features, from latency budgets to drift monitoring, and Rich Mironov warns that funding software as one-time projects kills products past v1.0. Also, Sean Goedecke examines why trust between engineers and PMs erodes so quickly.
Lastly, Ara Kharazian reports that top firms spend $7,449 per employee per month on AI, with Anthropic overtaking OpenAI. Yet, Kristin Broughton, Mark Maurer, and Jennifer Williams find that only 26% of companies fully track those costs. Ruben Dominguez believes most organizations overestimate their AI maturity by two levels, and Cris Beswick adds that declining empathy and psychological safety quietly dismantle the capacity to innovate. Finally, Ben Maraney shows what structured adoption looks like through Forter’s agent sprint.
TL;DR: Compounding Systems and Agents Go Hand-in-Hand
Every AI conversation starts from zero because the model forgets who you are. The Claude Cowork Online Course teaches you to change that: build persistent Skills, connect your tools, and assemble agents for recurring work. No coding.
Thesis: “A prompt disappears after one use; a Skill compounds across every session.”
TL; DR: AI’s 1997 Internet Moment — Food for Agile Thought #547
Welcome to the 547th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,532 peers. This week, Benedict Evans tells Lenny Rachitsky that today marks AI’s 1997 Internet Moment and asks whether automation kills tasks or jobs, which Casey Newton’s guest, Kathryn Anne Edwards, treats as real but manageable, faulting unemployment insurance rather than fearing an idle underclass. Itamar Gilad warns that cheap AI coding tempts teams to build before validating, while Malcolm Spittler and Dylan Patel name the value GDP misses ‘Dark Output,’ and Joost Minnaar prefers autonomous-team networks over a single chain of command. Also, Marina Favaro and Jack Clark sketch the implications of recursive self-improvement of AI.
Next, Rich Mironov warns that AI ships 100x more code, yet attention and budgets don’t scale, so products that skip discovery rarely stick. METR, with Anthropic, Google, Meta, and OpenAI, finds that AI agents could plausibly go rogue but not robustly, while Teresa Torres notes that Cowork’s VM hosts the Mini Shai-Hulud worm without blocking it. Mike Fisher likens siloed teams to hand-copying the Diamond Sutra, and Jeff Gothelf redefines “done” as acceptable variance.
Lastly, Marc Abraham borrows venture capital’s ‘terminal value’ to help product managers judge whether a product merits more investment. Addy Osmani calls the opposite reflex ‘cognitive surrender,’ in which you stop thinking and accept the AI’s answer without checking it. Mark Graban shows confession works only when fixes follow, citing Burger King and Domino’s, while Tobi Lütke runs Shopify’s agent River in public Slack so everyone learns by watching. Finally, Anthropic open-sourced 11 role-specific Claude Cowork plugins for knowledge workers.
Eric Ries’ new book ‘Incorruptible’ solves a problem most readers will not face for years: protecting a valuable organization from capture once it succeeds. The builders that AI is creating hit an earlier issue: Building software used to force the question of whether it was worth building. That gate has largely collapsed. Eric Ries asks how mission survives success; we, the normals, how judgment survives abundance.
Thesis: Ries’s Incorruptible solves a later problem, protecting a valuable organization from capture; cheap building created an earlier one, where judgment about what is worth building is the only gate left. That is the problem this article addresses.
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.