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When Your Agent Is the Disruptor, Not the Feature

From the desk · why it matters

If you're deciding which parts of your stack to integrate tightly and which to leave modular, Christensen's framework tells you exactly where to draw that line — and getting it wrong is how well-funded teams lose to scrappier ones shipping faster.

Clayton Christensen's The Innovator's Solution moves disruption theory from diagnosis to prescription. The book's core argument is that new entrants win not by attacking incumbents head-on but by competing against non-consumption — finding the people and situations that existing solutions simply ignore. Pair that with the jobs-to-be-done lens, which insists customers don't buy products so much as hire them to accomplish something specific, and you get a useful discipline: build for the job, not the persona. The integration advice follows naturally — stay tightly coupled where the performance gap still hurts, modularize only once the architecture is good enough.

The non-consumption insight lands differently when your product is agent-powered. The underserved situation is often a workflow nobody bothered to automate because human judgment seemed irreplaceable — that's exactly where an agent can step in at the low end and climb. Jobs-to-be-done thinking sharpens your prompt architecture and handoff design: the agent is hired for a job, not a capability, and if you can't name the job precisely, neither can the agent. The integration rule becomes a trust question — wherever your agent's output quality still falls short of what a human expects, you keep tight human oversight in the loop rather than modularizing it away prematurely.

Take this to your agent
  • target workflows nobody has bothered to automate yet, not the ones incumbents already own
  • define the job your agent is hired to do before you design its tools or escalation paths
  • hold tight integration wherever agent reliability isn't yet good enough to earn modular trust.
Read original at The Innovator’s Solution

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