The role of a top engineer is shifting from writing code to orchestrating multiple AI agents simultaneously. Notion's co-founder now queues tasks for AIs to work on while he's away, becoming a manager of AI talent rather than just an individual contributor, dramatically multiplying his leverage.
Beyond traditional engineers using AI and non-technical "vibe coders," a third archetype is emerging: the "agentic engineer." This professional operates at a higher level of abstraction, managing AI agents to perform programming, rather than writing or even reading the code themselves, reinventing the engineering skill set.
Don't think of AI as replacing roles. Instead, envision a new organizational structure where every human employee manages a team of their own specialized AI agents. This model enhances individual capabilities without eliminating the human team, making everyone more effective.
As AI evolves from single-task tools to autonomous agents, the human role transforms. Instead of simply using AI, professionals will need to manage and oversee multiple AI agents, ensuring their actions are safe, ethical, and aligned with business goals, acting as a critical control layer.
Top-performing engineering teams are evolving from hands-on coding to a managerial role. Their primary job is to define tasks, kick off multiple AI agents in parallel, review plans, and approve the final output, rather than implementing the details themselves.
As businesses deploy multiple AI agents across various platforms, a new operations role will become necessary. This "Agent Manager" will be responsible for ensuring the AI workforce functions correctly—preventing hallucinations, validating data sources, and maintaining agent performance and integration.
The evolution from AI autocomplete to chat is reaching its next phase: parallel agents. Replit's CEO Amjad Masad argues the next major productivity gain will come not from a single, better agent, but from environments where a developer manages tens of agents working simultaneously on different features.
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 job of an individual contributor is no longer about direct execution but about allocation. ICs now act like managers, directing AI agents to perform tasks and using their judgment to prioritize, review, and integrate the output. This represents a fundamental shift in the nature of knowledge work.
AI will handle most routine tasks, reducing the number of average 'doers'. Those remaining will be either the absolute best in their craft or individuals leveraging AI for superhuman productivity. Everyone else must shift to 'director' roles, focusing on strategy, orchestration, and interpreting AI output.
Unlike typical AI coding assistants that act as pair programmers, Codex's cloud agents allow a single founder to operate like a CEO. You can delegate concurrent tasks—coding, marketing, product roadmapping—to different AI 'employees', maximizing productivity even while you sleep.