Agent-first SDLC: from pilots to production
Agent-first development is moving from hype to execution, and teams that redesign workflows, codebases, and governance around AI agents are starting to ship faster while hiring now expects AI fluency by default. OpenAI’s internal playbook outlines concrete practices like making an agent the tool of first resort, maintaining AGENTS.md, exposing internal tools via CLI/MCP, and writing fast tests to keep agents productive and safe ([OpenAI team thread recap](https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/2019566641491963946.htmladar guide](https://www.techradar.com/pro/how-to-take-ai-from-pilots-to-deliver-real-business-value)[^2]). Urgency is rising with accelerating model capability and massive 2026 AI capex, and leadership signals that AI literacy is now table stakes for hiring ([Nate’s Substack](https://natesnewsletter.substack.com/p/the-two-career-collapses-happening)[^3]; [Cisco CEO remarks](https://www.webpronews.com/chuck-robbins-blunt-career-playbook-why-ciscos-ceo-says-the-rules-of-getting-hired-have-fundamentally-changed/)[^4]). [^1]: Practical blueprint for agent-first workflows (agents captain, AGENTS.md, skills, tool access via CLI/MCP, fast tests, quality bar). [^2]: Execution framework to scale beyond pilots with governance, integration, and business alignment. [^3]: Context on accelerating AI capability and investment signaling near-term impact pressure. [^4]: Market signal that AI fluency is expected across roles, not just engineering.