The Most Valuable Person in the Company in 2026: Are You an 'Executor' or an 'Architect'?
Forget the Shallow Discussion
Forget the shallow discussion about “AI will steal jobs.”
The real watershed in 2026 won’t be who “uses” AI, but who possesses a specific skill that is transforming the cost of technology to something close to zero.
The question is no longer: “Do you know how to use AI?”
The question now is: “Do you know WHAT to ask AI to do?”
The Critical Alert
What was a differentiator in 2024 will soon be basic.
The game has changed radically. And it’s not about tools - it’s about fundamental skills.
The Paradigm Shift
2020-2023:
Valuable skill = Implement code quickly
Bottleneck = Number of developers
2026:
Valuable skill = Specify with surgical precision
Bottleneck = Quality of thinking
Implementation became commodity.
Thinking became gold.
The End of the Implementation “Bottleneck”
How It Was (2020-2023)
For decades, technical implementation was software’s biggest obstacle.
The painful process:
Day 1: You have the idea
Day 2: Present to team
Day 5: Planning meeting
Day 10: Enters backlog
Day 30: Sprint planning
Day 40: Developer starts coding
Day 60: Code review
Day 70: QA finds bugs
Day 80: Fixes
Day 90: Finally in production
3 months for a simple feature
How It Is Now (2026)
The new process:
Day 1: You specify with precision
↓
AI Agent:
- Writes code
- Tests
- Fixes bugs
- Deploys to production
↓
Day 1, 4 hours later: Feature in production
From 90 days to 4 hours
Radical Efficiency: The StrongDM Case
The company StrongDM is cited as a real example:
Impressive numbers:
- Teams of only 3 people
- Deliver production software
- At global scale
- Millions of users
How?
Traditional team (2023):
- 1 Product Manager
- 5 Developers
- 2 QA
- 1 DevOps
Total: 9 people
Team with agents (2026):
- 1 Product Manager (specifies precisely)
- 1 Tech Lead (supervises agents)
- 1 DevOps (infrastructure)
- 5 AI Agents (do technical work)
Total: 3 people + AI
The Age of Agents
In these teams, no human writes or reviews code — AI agents build, test, and ship to production alone.
Exponential Revenue with Tiny Teams
We’re seeing companies of only 10 to 15 people reaching hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue thanks to this extreme automation.
Real examples (2026):
| Company | Team | Annual Revenue | Revenue/Person |
|---|---|---|---|
| Startup A | 12 people | $180M | $15M |
| Startup B | 8 people | $120M | $15M |
| Startup C | 15 people | $300M | $20M |
Comparison with traditional companies:
| Traditional Company | Team | Revenue | Revenue/Person |
|---|---|---|---|
| Software Corp | 500 people | $500M | $1M |
| Tech Inc | 1000 people | $800M | $800K |
15-20x higher productivity.
The Golden Skill: High-Precision Description
The New Most Valuable Skill
The competency that will separate the “replaceable” professional from the “irreplaceable” in 2026:
Ability to describe what needs to exist with enough clarity that a machine can build everything without needing follow-up questions.
Why Is This So Hard?
Poor specification (typical):
"Create a login page"
AI Agent:
- Login with what? Email? Username?
- Password requirements? How many characters?
- Forgot password? How does it work?
- Social login? Which providers?
- Multi-factor? Required or optional?
- Session expires when?
- Max attempts? Lock account?
→ 20 questions back
→ Multiple iterations
→ Still not what you wanted
High-precision specification:
"Create login page with:
AUTHENTICATION:
- Email + password (6-20 chars, 1 uppercase, 1 number)
- OAuth: Google, GitHub
- Rate limit: 5 attempts/15min, then lock for 1h
RECOVERY:
- Forgot password: email with 24h token
- Display message: "If email exists, link sent"
SESSION:
- JWT token, exp 24h
- Refresh token 30 days
- Logout invalidates both
SECURITY:
- HTTPS only
- Rate limiting 10 req/min/IP
- Log all attempts
- Optional 2FA (TOTP)
UI/UX:
- Centered, responsive
- Loading states
- Generic error: "Invalid credentials" (no hints)
- Success redirect: /dashboard
EDGE CASES:
- Email unconfirmed: block login, show "confirm email"
- Account suspended: "Contact support"
- Suspicious IP: send email notification
Result:
Agent implements perfectly on first try.
No questions. No unnecessary iterations.
The Three Pillars of Perfect Specification
To master this “art”, you need three pillars:
1. Deep Customer Understanding
It’s not enough to know what the customer asked for.
You need to know:
- What they REALLY want
- What they DIDN’T say but need
- All edge cases before they happen
Example:
Client asks: "Scheduling system"
Executor (bad):
"OK, I'll make a schedule appointment screen"
Architect (good):
"Which timezone?
Allow rescheduling? How far in advance?
What if double-booking?
Notification? SMS, email, both?
Cancellation? How far in advance?
No-show? How to handle?
Schedule conflict? How to resolve?
Holidays? Special hours?
Client can book multiple sessions?
Limit of future bookings?
Confirmation? Automatic or manual?"
Anticipate ALL edge cases before they happen.
2. Systemic Vision
Know how to describe not just what software should do when everything goes right, but exactly what it should do when things go wrong.
Linear thinking (executor):
"When user clicks 'Buy':
→ Process payment
→ Show confirmation"
Systemic thinking (architect):
"When user clicks 'Buy':
HAPPY PATH:
→ Validate stock
→ Reserve item (5 min)
→ Process payment
→ Confirm reservation
→ Send email
→ Update stock
→ Redirect to /success
ERROR SCENARIOS:
Insufficient stock:
→ Show "Product sold out"
→ Offer notification when back
→ Suggest similar products
Payment declined:
→ Release reservation
→ Show specific error (generic if sensitive)
→ Allow trying another card
→ Offer alternative payment
Payment timeout:
→ Release reservation after 5min
→ Don't charge customer
→ Log for investigation
Duplication (double click):
→ Idempotency key
→ Process only 1x
→ Return same result
Database inconsistency:
→ Transaction rollback
→ Notify tech team
→ Don't confirm to customer
Email service down:
→ Process purchase normally
→ Queue email for retry
→ Purchase doesn't depend on email
You need to think of EVERYTHING.
3. Connecting the Dots
Be the product thinker who understands how each piece of the business connects.
Something a pure executor (who just types code without understanding why) can’t do.
Where the Market Is Going
The Rush for “Forward Deployed Engineers”
It’s no coincidence that giants like OpenAI and Anthropic are hiring hundreds of forward deployed engineers.
They realized:
The challenge is no longer creating the tool, but knowing how to implement it in real systems, with data and contexts specific to each company.
What a Forward Deployed Engineer does:
NOT:
- Develop AI (that already exists)
- Write code (agents do that)
YES:
- Understand customer context
- Map existing processes
- Specify integration precisely
- Validate if solution solves REAL problem
- Ensure adoption (not just implementation)
Salary: $200k - $500k/year
Why so high? Because it’s scarce.
The New Value Pyramid
2023:
Top: Senior Engineers ($200k)
Middle: Mid-level ($120k)
Base: Junior ($80k)
2026:
Top: Solution Architects / Spec Writers ($300k)
Middle: Forward Deployed Engineers ($200k)
Base: AI Agents ($0.05/hour)
[Pure executors: No longer in pyramid]
The Quote That Defines Everything
“Machines aren’t replacing thinking; they’re replacing absolutely everything except thinking.”
Translating:
What machines replaced:
- ✅ Write code
- ✅ Test code
- ✅ Fix bugs
- ✅ Deploy
- ✅ Basic monitoring
- ✅ Technical documentation
- ✅ Code review
What machines DIDN’T replace (and won’t soon):
- ❌ Deeply understand the customer
- ❌ Connect business + tech + user
- ❌ Anticipate non-obvious consequences
- ❌ Make trade-offs with context
- ❌ Define what’s worth building
- ❌ Specify with surgical precision
Executor vs Architect: The Test
You’re an Executor if:
❌ Wait for detailed spec to start ❌ Do exactly what was asked (no more, no less) ❌ Don’t question the “why” ❌ Focus on “how to do technically” ❌ Need multiple iterations to understand requirements ❌ Don’t think about edge cases until they happen ❌ See code, not the system
Risk: High (AI already does this better)
You’re an Architect if:
✅ Ask questions before receiving spec ✅ Anticipate edge cases nobody thought of ✅ Understand the “why” deeply ✅ Connect tech + business + user ✅ Specify precisely the first time ✅ Think about long-term consequences ✅ See the system, not just code
Risk: Low (AI doesn’t replace this)
How to Become an Architect
1. Stop Just “Doing”
Before implementing ANYTHING, ask:
- Why does this matter?
- What real problem does it solve?
- Who benefits?
- What's the worst case?
- What can go wrong?
- How does this affect the rest of the system?
- Is there a simpler way?
2. Study Business, Not Just Tech
Learn about:
- Company business model
- Metrics that matter (CAC, LTV, churn)
- Who the real customers are
- How the company makes money
- Competitors and differentiators
- Legal/compliance constraints
3. Practice Specification
Daily exercise:
1. Take any feature
2. Write COMPLETE specification
3. Include ALL edge cases
4. Think about systemic impacts
5. Review: could someone implement without questions?
4. Learn to Say “No”
True architect says:
"This doesn't solve the real problem"
"There's a simpler way"
"This feature will hurt, not help"
"Maintenance cost isn't worth it"
Executor never questions, just does.
5. Think About Consequences
For each decision, ask:
- Impact in 1 month?
- Impact in 1 year?
- Impact in 5 years?
- Technical debt generated?
- Maintenance costs?
- Scalability?
Reflection for the Reader
The Critical Question
Are you training your ability to “do” or your ability to “specify”?
In the world of 2026:
Those who don’t understand the business will just be spectators of machines’ free execution.
Conclusion
The most valuable person in the company in 2026 is not:
- ❌ Who programs fastest
- ❌ Who knows most languages
- ❌ Who works most hours
- ❌ Who has most certifications
The most valuable person is:
✅ Who understands the problem deeply ✅ Who specifies with precision surgically ✅ Who anticipates edge cases before they happen ✅ Who connects business + tech + user ✅ Who thinks systemically about consequences ✅ Who is the Intentions Architect
Execution became commodity.
Thinking became gold.
Choose to be the gold.
And You?
Do you already feel ready to be the “Intentions Architect” of your area?
Are you developing the high-precision specification skill?
Or are you still competing with machines on execution speed?
Share your journey:
- Email: fodra@fodra.com.br
- LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/mauriciofodra
The future doesn’t belong to those who execute.
It belongs to those who think.
Read Also
- The End of Execution and the Rise of the Solution Architect — The sibling post that deepens the architect vs. executor thesis.
- The 3 Roads of 2026: Which One Are You Driving On? — The three possible paths for those who want to be the architect.
- AI’s ‘Calculator Moment’ — Why current education isn’t producing architects.