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Replacing my Right Hand with AI

I like Erik’s thoughts about AI and coding in Replacing my Right Hand with AI:

I do think that AI will lower the bar for anyone to be able to create software, just like anyone can use Excel to do their own personal accounting. This is a good thing!

And:

Human engineers won’t go away. We’ll still be needed to drive high-level prioritization, understand the overall architecture and scope of the problem, and review the AI’s work, especially as systems get bigger. But we’ll spend much more of our time thinking about what to build, and much less on the repetitive “how” of building it.

On the Product side of this argument, there is Paweł Huryn’s Will We Lose Our Jobs to AI? Cutting Through the Hype. Short answer: no! But he makes some points about how we should adapt that I agree with, especially these two:

  • Educate yourself in AI: You should understand concepts like fine-tuning and AI agents, but there’s no need to obsess over them. YouTube videos are perfectly fine unless you want to tie your career more closely to AI.
  • Get interested in the business side of the product: How do your organization’s Sales, Success, and Support teams work? How exactly does your company make money? How do you acquire customers? What are the key acquisition, retention, and revenue metrics? How do these metrics differ depending on the customer segment? How have they changed over time? Who are your competitors? What’s unique about your strategy?

In short, use AI for the things that it is good at, and get better at the things that it’s not good at.