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Project management tools like Jira are not obsolete; they are positioned to become the coordination layer for AI agents. As autonomous agents work together on complex tasks, they will require standardized, headless systems for project management and knowledge sharing, creating a new market for agent coordination.

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Notion is creating a new, defensible market by positioning its platform not just for human work, but as a central hub where different third-party AI agents can interact, collaborate, and have their actions tracked. This strategy aims to make Notion the essential infrastructure for an emerging agent-driven workforce.

While users building their own tools is a risk, the more profound disruption comes from AI agents performing knowledge work autonomously. This could eliminate the need for human-centric software like project management tools entirely, as agents handle tasks, tracking, and completion without manual input.

The next evolution of work will involve humans acting as orchestrators for "swarms" of specialized AI agents. A manager will direct a team of agents—each trained for a specific function like email marketing or media buying—to collaboratively execute complex projects with high levels of autonomy.

The next evolution of agentic work involves massive, collaborative swarms of AIs working together. Current tools like GitHub, designed for human workflows with a single master branch, are ill-suited for this paradigm. The future will require new, agent-native platforms, possibly resembling social networks, to manage thousands of parallel experiments and collaborative branches.

Tools like Claude CoWork preview a future where teams of AI agents collaborate on multi-faceted projects, like a product launch, simultaneously. This automates tactical entry-level tasks, elevating human workers to roles focused on high-level strategy, review, and orchestrating these AI "employees."

The race in enterprise AI isn't just about agent capabilities, but about owning the central dashboard where employees direct agents across all applications (Salesforce, Jira, etc.). Companies like OpenAI and Microsoft are vying to become this primary interface, controlling the customer relationship and relegating other apps to the background.

Legacy systems like CRMs will lose their central role. A new, dynamic 'agent layer' will sit above them, interpreting user intent and executing tasks across multiple tools. This layer, which collapses the distance between intent and action, will become the primary place where work gets done.

The future of software isn't just AI-powered features. It's a fundamental shift from tools that assist humans to autonomous agents that perform tasks. Human roles will evolve from *doing* the work to *orchestrating* thousands of these agents.

The next frontier in AI is not just developing individual agents, but orchestrating teams of them. Users will move from dialoguing with a single chatbot to managing multiple agents working in parallel on complex, long-running workflows. This becomes a new core skill for knowledge workers.

Asana's CEO sees the rise of AI agents creating a massive new coordination challenge for companies. The company is betting its future on becoming the essential "common ledger" or "runtime" for this new human-agent workforce, leveraging its existing work graph to manage and sequence the actions of numerous autonomous agents.