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#jugement

2 Fiches

Strategie & Frameworks Automatisch geprüfte Übersetzung

Loop Engineering for Product Managers

Long-form essay by **Shubham Saboo** (X/Twitter) advancing a thesis on the Product Manager role in the age of agents: the next key skill is **not prompt engineering** but **Loop Engineering** — designing a *system that improves with every run* rather than writing the perfect prompt every time. A **loop** is a repeated cycle: change what shapes the agent's behavior → run it → evaluate the output → keep the change if quality rises, revert otherwise → **compound the learning** so the next version starts ahead. For a PM, the entry point is not code but the **durable artifacts** that encode their judgment: PRD-review skill, customer-call *summarizer*, evaluation rubric, launch checklist, research workflow, `CLAUDE.md`, prompt template, prioritization framework. Because they are reused, these artifacts **compound in both directions** — and **drift** silently (a CLAUDE.md that keeps growing, a checklist that gets ignored…): the model has not regressed, the artifacts have drifted unwatched. A loop has **5 parts**: trigger, action, **proof**, memory, **stop condition** (the most critical). **Evals** become PM work (testing the artifact against known examples: 3 good / 3 bad PRDs, 5 understood calls, 2 past launches). **Memory** lives on **GitHub** (the repo becomes "product memory": commits, diffs, eval results, decision log, rollback). Recommended first loop: a **weekly product signal loop** (every Friday). Taste remains central — but it now needs **proof**. Cites Boris (creator of Claude Code): "he no longer writes prompts, he writes loops."

#Loop Engineering#product management#augmented PM

Shubham Saboo (@Saboo_Shubham_)

Transformation & Adoption Automatisch geprüfte Übersetzung

AI made your engineers fast. Too fast to leave room for the rest of the org to think.

LinkedIn post by Fred Plais (CEO of Archie, ex-Platform.sh): AI made engineers so fast that the **bottleneck moved upstream**, to a place nobody is watching. With execution no longer the slow part, the thinking time that used to exist "while the code was being built" has vanished — the right vision now has to be formed and the right decisions made in a fraction of the time. Two rare profiles are emerging: the one who can **articulate a vision precise enough** for an agent to execute without derailing, and the one who knows how to **orchestrate agents** (anticipating their failures, chaining them, catching an error before it propagates). Hiring for "code output" is becoming obsolete: that is precisely what has stopped being rare. Final thesis: "thinking clearly was always the job — speed just made it impossible to fake".

#bottleneck#bottleneck shift#execution speed

Fred PLAIS (Frédéric Plais)