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To get an engineering team "AI pilled," a powerful strategy is to give them a month to fix everything they dislike about the codebase using AI tools. This provides a tangible, motivating win and demonstrates the power of AI on familiar problems.
Coinbase held a time-boxed event where 100+ engineers used an AI tool to simultaneously submit PRs for trivial fixes. This created a transformational moment, breaking inertia, proving the tool's value, and generating massive, visible momentum for adoption across the entire organization.
To get skeptical engineers to adopt AI, don't focus on complex coding tasks. Instead, provide tools that automate the tedious, soul-crushing "paper cut" tasks like writing unit tests, linting, and fixing design debt. This frames AI as a tool that frees them up for more enjoyable, high-impact work.
To overcome employee fear of AI, don't provide a general-purpose tool. Instead, identify the tasks your team dislikes most—like writing performance reviews—and demonstrate a specific AI workflow to solve that pain point. This approach frames AI as a helpful assistant rather than a replacement.
When employees are 'too busy' to learn AI, don't just schedule more training. Instead, identify their most time-consuming task and build a specific AI tool (like a custom GPT) to solve it. This proves AI's value by giving them back time, creating the bandwidth and motivation needed for deeper learning.
To foster genuine AI adoption, introduce it through play. Instead of starting with a hackathon focused on business problems, the speaker built an AI-powered scavenger hunt for her team's off-site. This "dogfooding through play" approach created a positive first interaction, demystified the technology, and set a culture of experimentation.
Instead of codebases becoming harder to manage over time, use an AI agent to create a "compounding engineering" system. Codify learnings from each feature build—successful plans, bug fixes, tests—back into the agent's prompts and tools, making future development faster and easier.
AI tools are most readily adopted for tedious tasks engineers dislike, such as performing code reviews, fixing lint errors, and managing CI processes. This automation makes the core job of an engineer more focused on creative, high-impact work, thereby increasing job satisfaction.
To win over skeptical team members, high-level mandates are ineffective. Instead, demonstrate AI's value by building a tool that solves a personal, tedious part of their job, such as automating a weekly report they despise. This tangible, personal benefit is the fastest path to adoption.
The key to changing behavior is demonstrating immediate, personal value. Instead of abstract training, identify a universally disliked task—like a weekly report—and build a custom AI solution for it. Solving a major pain point is the most effective way to drive organic adoption.
To gain organizational buy-in for AI, start by asking teams to document their most draining, repetitive daily tasks. Building agents to eliminate these specific pain points creates immediate value, generates enthusiasm, and builds internal champions for broader strategic initiatives, making it an approachable path to adoption.