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Strategy & Frameworks Auto-verified translation

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 Auto-verified translation

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)