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AI can accelerate development, marketing, and sales tasks. However, it currently lacks the strategic judgment, customer empathy, and "taste" required for strong product management—deciding what to build and why.

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Product managers should leverage AI to get 80% of the way on tasks like competitive analysis, but must apply their own intellect for the final 20%. Fully abdicating responsibility to AI can lead to factual errors and hallucinations that, if used to build a product, result in costly rework and strategic missteps.

Modern AI can rapidly build complex products ("zero to n"), but it lacks the human intuition to simplify by removing features. This critical skill, honed through real-world usage and experience, is what prevents products from becoming bloated and unfocused.

AI tools can handle administrative and analytical tasks for product managers, like summarizing notes or drafting stories. However, they lack the essential human elements of empathy, nuanced judgment, and creativity required to truly understand user problems and make difficult trade-off decisions.

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.

AI tools are dramatically lowering the cost of implementation and "rote building." The value shifts, making the most expensive and critical part of product creation the design phase: deeply understanding the user pain point, exercising good judgment, and having product taste.

AI will not eliminate the product management role; it will automate tactical tasks like writing acceptance criteria. However, the core strategic responsibilities—defining the problem, the customer, and the desired experience—remain indispensable.

As AI commoditizes the 'how' of building products, the most critical human skills become the 'what' and 'why.' Product sense (knowing ingredients for a great product) and product taste (discerning what’s missing) will become far more valuable than process management.

Implementing AI tools in a company that lacks a clear product strategy and deep customer knowledge doesn't speed up successful development; it only accelerates aimless activity. True acceleration comes from applying AI to a well-defined direction informed by user understanding.

As AI makes it incredibly easy to build products, the market will be flooded with options. The critical, differentiating skill will no longer be technical execution but human judgment: deciding *what* should exist, which features matter, and the right distribution strategy. Synthesizing these elements is where future value lies.

As AI automates synthesis and creation, the product manager's core value shifts from managing the development process to deeply contextualizing all available information (market, customer, strategy) to define the *right* product direction.