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To keep pace with evolving AI capabilities, Floto.ai's engineers build initial prototypes based on a problem statement. The product manager then crafts the user experience around what's technologically possible, eliminating the PM as a bottleneck and ensuring the spec isn't outdated upon creation.
The traditional, linear handoff from product (PRDs) to design to dev is too slow for AI's rapid iteration cycles. Leading companies merge these roles into smaller, senior teams where design and product deliver functional prototypes directly to engineering, collapsing the feedback loop and accelerating development.
Traditional "writing-first" cultures create communication gaps and translation errors. With modern AI tools, product managers can now build working prototypes in hours. This "show, don't tell" approach gets ideas validated faster, secures project leadership, and overcomes language and team barriers.
The traditional workflow (Idea -> PRD -> Alignment) is outdated. Now, PMs first create a functional AI prototype. This visual, interactive artifact is then brought to engineers and scientists for debate, accelerating alignment and making the development process more creative and collaborative from the start.
Capable AI coding assistants allow PMs to build and test functional prototypes or "skills" in a single day. This changes the product development philosophy, prioritizing quick validation with users over creating detailed UI mockups and specifications upfront.
The traditional product management workflow (spec -> engineer build) is obsolete. The modern AI PM uses agentic tools to build, test, and iterate on the initial product, handing a working, validated prototype to engineering for productionalization.
Traditional SaaS development starts with a user problem. AI development inverts this by starting with what the technology makes possible. Teams must prototype to test reliability first, because execution is uncertain. The UI and user problem validation come later in the process.
In AI, low prototyping costs and customer uncertainty make the traditional research-first PM model obsolete. The new approach is to build a prototype quickly, show it to customers to discover possibilities, and then iterate based on their reactions, effectively building the solution before the problem is fully defined.
AI coding agents compress product development by turning specs directly into code. This transforms the PM's role from a translator between customers and engineers into a "shaper of intent." The key skill becomes defining a problem so clearly that an agent can execute it, making the spec itself the prototype.
AI co-pilots have accelerated engineering velocity to the point where traditional design-led workflows are now the slowest part of product development. In response, some agile teams are flipping the process, having engineers build a functional prototype first and then creating formal Figma designs and UI polish later.
The product development cycle has shifted. Instead of writing a spec, Product Managers use AI coding tools like Bolt.new to build the initial working version of a product. They then hand this functional prototype to engineers for hardening, security, and scaling, dramatically accelerating the process.