Agentic AI solved coding — and exposed every other problem in software engineering

Agentic AI is now a core part of the engineering process, driving massive execution leverage and helping us generate more code than ever before. Yet, a difficult question I’ve increasingly heard from business leaders is: if we’re shipping code faster than ever, why aren’t our products improving at the same rate?The reason is that writing code was never the rate limiter. Defining the right requirements, integrating with complex systems, and maintaining software under real-world conditions has always been the hard part. And when agents flood an organization with lots of new code, the hard part only gets harder. Agents compress execution time. They do not compress ambiguity, accountability, or operational complexity. As AI-generated code scales, human review is becoming a massive new bottleneck, and engineers are losing the context needed to catch agent mistakes. The companies that understand this will move forward deliberately and even create new roles because of AI. The ones that don’t

Agentic AI solved coding — and exposed every other problem in software engineering

Agentic AI is now a core part of the engineering process, driving massive execution leverage and helping us generate more code than ever before. Yet, a difficult question I’ve increasingly heard from business leaders is: if we’re shipping code faster than ever, why aren’t our products improving at the same rate?

The reason is that writing code was never the rate limiter. Defining the right requirements, integrating with complex systems, and maintaining software under real-world conditions has always been the hard part. And when agents flood an organization with lots of new code, the hard part only gets harder. Agents compress execution time. They do not compress ambiguity, accountability, or operational complexity. 

As AI-generated code scales, human review is becoming a massive new bottleneck, and engineers are losing the context needed to catch agent mistakes. The companies that understand this will move forward deliberately and even create new roles because of AI. The ones that don’t will default to a simpler, far more destructive conclusion: Reduce headcount and increase AI spend.

The playbook

Irreversible structural decisions demand caution, precisely because the technology is moving so fast. Enterprise engineering leaders need a deliberate playbook to navigate the chaos. Here's how to start:

Phase 1: Financial and risk governance

Protect the downside — secure the infrastructure and cap the financial bleeding.

  • Treat governance as a tier-one risk: The pressure to integrate AI is real, but giving teams the freedom to experiment without a centralized structure creates fragmented processes, duplicated work, and runaway costs. Organizations will need to establish shared standards while still allowing teams to adapt and explore within defined boundaries. This means treating agent configuration like production infrastructure — versioning, reviewing, and testing prompts and skills before rolling them out gradually.

  • Enforce least privilege for non-human actors: Never allow an agent to simply inherit the full permissions of its human operator. Human engineers are granted broad access because they possess contextual judgment and bear ultimate accountability. Deploying agents with human-level access without careful consideration introduces an accountability gap into your systems. Implement strict separation between read and write/execute access, and mandate human-in-the-loop approval gates for destructive or production-altering actions. As agents transition from suggesting code to autonomously executing tasks, they must be rigorously incorporated into your security model.

  • Watch your wallet: Protect your overall AI budget by enforcing quotas and rate limits for both engineering and production. Cautionary tales are increasingly common: Uber capped its AI spend after burning its 2026 budget by April, and, according to Axios, an unnamed company incurred a staggering $500 million Anthropic bill in a single month due to runaway agentic loops.

Phase 2: Technical strategy

Build the engine: Choose the right models and measure their success.

  • Go multi-model and multi-vendor: No single model excels at every task. It's important to precisely characterize the behavior and performance boundaries across models to understand where each excels, routing specific tasks to the systems best equipped to handle them. Standardizing on a single vendor or model sacrifices capabilities and introduces a critical single point of failure. No organization should absorb that level of concentration risk in its core engineering function.

  • Pay for the frontier: Treat AI as engineering leverage, not just another SaaS expense. Pay for premium frontier models that deliver the highest quality output and reduce costly rework. Ultimately, the cheapest model isn't the one with the lowest token price — it’s the one that maximizes efficiency while minimizing your downstream risk.

  • Measure what actually matters: Deployments, lines of code, and pull requests were never good metrics for productivity, and with AI, they are actively misleading. Instead, aim for metrics that are attached to business outcomes (feature adoption, retention) and engineering durability (change failure rate, escaped defects, code survival over time). For AI efficiency, measure task success per dollar and rework time. Token counts are convenient for leaderboards but they cannot tell you if the tokens were well spent.

Phase 3: Talent and organization

Realign your human capital to manage the new bottleneck.

  • Shift engineers from syntax to systems: As agents handle the bulk of code generation, human review and architectural alignment are the new bottlenecks. Organizations must deliberately upskill their workforce to transition from syntax-writers to systems-thinkers and agent-managers. Engineers need the training and mandate to guide agentic processes, manage complex cross-system integrations, and hold the overarching architectural vision that agents can struggle to maintain.

  • Redefine performance and incentives: When an individual engineer can generate the output of a former squad, traditional metrics like story points or sprint velocity can become ineffective overhead. Consider realigning your evaluation frameworks to better reward expanded business impact, cross-system reliability, and effective agent orchestration. If you want systems-thinkers who cover more strategic surface area, are willing to explore and take risks, and build products in a durable way, you must reward them for higher level impact, not sheer volume of output.

  • Don’t cut headcount before your strategy adapts: If you haven't integrated agentic workflows, measured augmented output in production, and reworked your roadmap around faster execution, you do not actually know whether your needs and capabilities align. Cutting headcount before establishing that baseline isn't discipline — it’s blindness. The goal is not simply smaller teams, but teams capable of covering more strategic surface area.

Enterprise AI adoption requires human elasticity

AI is not a replacement for engineering judgment; it is a force multiplier for it. In well-structured systems, it safely accelerates delivery. In poorly understood systems, it accelerates failure. We are already seeing the fallout: Outages, rising technical debt, and unexpected cost spikes driven by poorly governed adoption. These are operational failures, not theoretical risks.

The mistake organizations are now making isn’t adopting AI too slowly — it’s adopting it without understanding where it breaks.

For the C-suite, understanding this dynamic is no longer optional — it is the determining factor in how a business navigates this era. The challenge is that execution velocity is outpacing the industry's ability to manage the consequences. We have handed engineering teams the ultimate power tool. The old adage demands that you measure twice and cut once. Instead, too many firms are opting to just cut.

Joe Bertolami is CTO and co-founder of Clifton AI.

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