Food for Agile Thought 553: Dangerous Agile Myths, Produce Evidence Quality

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Dangerous Agile Myths — Food for Agile Thought #553

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TL; DR: Dangerous Agile Myths — Food for Agile Thought #553

Welcome to the 553rd edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 35,462 peers. This week, Henrik Mårtensson dismantles seven dangerous Agile myths, showing that fat-tailed cycle-time data invalidates the use of story points. Teresa Torres and Petra Wille question whether support tickets can replace story-based interviews, while Roman Pichler pushes visions beyond feature lists toward purpose. Turning to AI, Laura Summers finds LLM-assisted coding replaces building satisfaction with supervision fatigue, Benedict Evans sees foundation models becoming commodities, and Satya Nadella urges firms to own their learning loops before providers capture proprietary knowledge.

Next, John Cutler reframes software assets through a portfolio lens, asking whether AI makes you faster or moves you faster in the wrong direction. George Sivulka and Arvind Narayanan both place the bottleneck in management, not model capability. On the human side, Sean Goedecke redefines engineering politics as knowing who holds power and making contributions visible, while Steven Sinofsky compares Chicago Law School’s AI ban to Harvard’s 1982 computer ban, arguing such restrictions never last.

Lastly, Pavel Samsonov argues that product empathy rings hollow without respect, a gap LLMs deepen by pushing error correction onto users. Thomas Squeo and Matt Kamelman trace enterprise AI failure to missing governance, not weak models. Susan MacKenty Brady, Stuart Kliman, and Leslie Smith name four leadership traps quietly eroding trust. Finally, Dave Rooney rethinks story slicing when AI handles large tasks, and Tristan Kromer notes AI accelerates experiments but cannot pick the right question.

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