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Simply building what users ask for can trap a product in old paradigms, like reinventing Photoshop's lasso tool for an AI context. A successful strategy involves staying slightly ahead of user adoption, introducing new capabilities that fundamentally change their workflow, and guiding them toward a more efficient future.

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Before launch, product leaders must ask if their AI offering is a true product or just a feature. Slapping an AI label on a tool that automates a minor part of a larger workflow is a gimmick. It will fail unless it solves a core, high-friction problem for the customer in its entirety.

Atlassian's CEO argues that AI tools should not just focus on novel capabilities. They must also improve users' current processes (e.g., AI-assisted writing). This dual approach brings the existing user base along while simultaneously showing them new, transformative ways to work, ensuring broader and faster adoption.

AI tools are causing an explosion of features, making execution a commodity. The core skill for product teams is no longer building, but deeply understanding user needs. The winning products will be those that solve real problems, not those that are merely built fast.

A more advanced use of AI involves working backward from an ultimate goal. By having AI interview you about your objectives and context, you can uncover opportunities to fundamentally change or eliminate workflows, rather than just making inefficient processes faster. This shifts the focus from productivity to innovation.

The initial rush to adopt AI resulted in superficial features like text rephrasing tools. That era is over. The next, more valuable phase of AI product development requires creatively embedding AI's reasoning capabilities into core product workflows, moving beyond simple generative tasks to create genuine, contextual automation.

In the rapidly advancing field of AI, building products around current model limitations is a losing strategy. The most successful AI startups anticipate the trajectory of model improvements, creating experiences that seem 80% complete today but become magical once future models unlock their full potential.

The feeling of being overwhelmed by AI stems from applying new technology to old structures like quarterly roadmaps and PRDs. The real solution isn't just faster work, but re-architecting the entire product development process to natively leverage AI, much like building superhighways for cars instead of using old horse trails.

Leveraging AI requires a dual focus. Leaders must apply AI to solve genuine customer problems, not just for the sake of technology. Simultaneously, they must upskill their teams and re-engineer internal development processes to reduce handoffs and accelerate the entire product cycle.

Don't just plug AI into your current processes, as this often creates more complexity and inefficiency. The correct approach is to discard existing workflows and redesign them from the ground up, based on the new paradigms AI introduces, like skipping a product requirements document entirely.

A "bolt-on" AI strategy will fail. Successful integration isn't about adding an AI feature; it's about fundamentally re-evaluating and rebuilding the entire product experience and its economics around new AI capabilities, creating entirely new user interactions.