As AI makes feature creation trivial, the crucial skill for product builders will be ruthless simplification. The challenge shifts from "what can you build?" to "what should you *not* build?" to maintain clarity and usability in an age of abundance.

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AI tools are commoditizing the act of writing code (software development). The durable skill and key differentiator is now software engineering: architecting systems, creating great user experiences, and applying taste. Building something people want to use is the new challenge.

The barrier to building AI products has collapsed. Aspiring builders should create a one-hour prototype to focus on the truly hard part: validating that they're solving a problem people actually want fixed. The bottleneck has shifted from technical execution to user validation.

The old product leadership model was a "rat race" of adding features and specs. The new model prioritizes deep user understanding and data to solve the core problem, even if it results in fewer features on the box.

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.

Perplexity's VP of Design, Henry Modiset, states that when hiring, he values product intuition above all else. AI can generate options, but the essential, irreplaceable skill for designers is the ability to choose what to build, how it fits the market, and why users will care.

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.

Jack Dorsey reframed the Product Manager role as "Product Editor." The most valuable skill is not generating new feature ideas, but exercising judgment to cut through the noise, simplify complexity, and edit the product down to the essential few things that truly drive customer outcomes.

As foundational AI models become commoditized, the key differentiator is shifting from marginal improvements in model capability to superior user experience and productization. Companies that focus on polish, ease of use, and thoughtful integration will win, making product managers the new heroes of the AI race.

Technical implementation is becoming easier with AI. The critical, and now more valuable, skill is the ability to deeply understand customer needs, communicate effectively, and guide a product to market fit. The focus is shifting from "how to build it" to "what to build and why."

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.