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As AI automates the mechanical aspects of jobs like software engineering, value shifts from pure execution to defining the 'what' and 'why'. Technical professionals must adopt the mindset of a product manager (guiding the project) and an artist (ensuring the final output is 'beautiful' and provides a great user experience).
In the age of AI, distinct roles like designer, PM, and engineer are converging. Long-term career success hinges on the ability to fluidly move between these disciplines and focus on shipping good software, rather than being confined by a rigid job title. Obsession with titles is a liability.
The historical separation between product management, design, and engineering is dissolving. AI assistants handle the coding, allowing a single person to define the product (PM), ensure high-quality aesthetics and UX (designer), and direct the technical implementation (engineer), thus converging the three roles.
In 10 years, AI will generate vast amounts of high-quality code, similar to the leap in image generation. The developer's role will shift from writing code to curation and design, exercising intent and critical judgment to select the best output from a sea of AI-generated options.
As AI agents automate code-writing, companies like WorkOS are hiring "product engineers" who possess taste, product sense, and strong communication. The stereotype of the purely technical, anti-social developer is becoming unemployable in modern tech companies.
With AI agents automating raw code generation, an engineer's role is evolving beyond pure implementation. To stay valuable, engineers must now cultivate a deep understanding of business context and product taste to know *what* to build and *why*, not just *how*.
As AI handles coding, traditional tech roles will merge. At Anthropic, PMs, designers, and engineers all code. The future is a generalist "Builder" who can handle multiple disciplines, making role specialization obsolete.
AI tools are collapsing the traditional moats around design, engineering, and product. As PMs and engineers gain design capabilities, designers must reciprocate by learning to code and, more importantly, taking on strategic business responsibilities to maintain their value and influence.
As AI tools empower individuals to handle tasks across the entire product development lifecycle, traditional, siloed roles are merging. This fundamental shift challenges how tech professionals define their value and contribution, causing significant professional anxiety.
AI's rise means traditional product roles are merging. Instead of identifying as a PM or designer, focus on your core skills (e.g., visual aesthetics, systems thinking) and use AI to fill gaps. This 'builder' mindset, focused on creating end-to-end, is key for future relevance.
Top engineers are no longer just coding specialists. They are hybrids who cross disciplines—combining product sense, infrastructure knowledge, design skills, and user empathy. AI handles the specialized coding, elevating the value of broad, system-level thinking.