The middle of
the job is being
hollowed out.
Eighteen senior product leaders. Fifty-four live-survey answers. Four ERRC flipcharts across two perspectives. Read as one: AI is not taking the PM's job. It is taking the middle of it.
The middle of the PM job is being hollowed out.
The top clusters on Question 1 — tickets, documentation, summaries, release notes, analysis, first prototypes — all sit in the same structural place. They are the middle work: translating already-understood intent into the artefacts that unblock engineering and stakeholders.
The core is preserved — actually amplified. The connective tissue is going to AI.
Given free time back, almost nobody asked for more features.
Eighteen senior leaders were offered a hypothetical twenty percent more time. Only two asked for it to ship more. The inventory of what they would buy back is the inventory of what the current operating model has squeezed out.
If you had 20% more time, where would it go?
The bottleneck this room names is not throughput. It is clarity about what to throw throughput at.
The biggest capability gap is judgment — not prompting.
The Product Lead role is changing more than the PM role.
Count the items on each ERRC flipchart and the asymmetry is striking. Nearly twice the change surface on the Lead side. And the content diverges: PMs talk craft. Leads talk operating model.
Discovery. Critical review of AI output. Deep expertise. Storytelling. How much change users can absorb.
Team-setup redesign. New collab with design & UX. Experimental leaders. Automation boundaries. Carrying teams.
The Lead role in the AI era spends less time requesting status and more time redrawing the system the PMs work in.
The discourse about AI and product management tends to focus on the PM. The room quietly said the Lead has the harder job.
Three tensions the room did not resolve.
These are not confusions. They are the unfinished work of the field.
Prototyping: Reduce — or Raise?
"Everyone is a PM now" — noise, or signal?
Speed versus depth.
The emotional layer is named. Openly.
Rare in a senior leadership room. Across both perspectives, items explicitly about emotion showed up — on the page, not just in the corridor.
That senior leaders named this — on paper, in a workshop — is itself a finding.