As much AI-driven development has normalized, we are still in the Wild West. While we are closer to homing in on what “best practices” actually mean, defining them remains a moving target. Right now, a fascinating tension is emerging between the workflows we build for ourselves and the systems we build for our teams.
At the individual level, best practices are a bit of a “choose your own adventure” setup, and that’s perfectly fine — with one major caveat. It’s incredibly easy to drift into isolated silos when you’re running your own little fleet of developer agents.
True individual mastery isn’t just about prompt engineering; it’s about context management and disorganization control. It’s setting up the right Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers to bridge your tools and services, and mastering the feedback loops necessary to manage parallel work. When you’re orchestrating multiple agent workflows, the core skill is balancing your own cognitive capacity — observing and inferring state across different tasks to ensure the train doesn’t run off the tracks.
But things get exponentially harder at the team level. Collective best practices require finding common ground, which inherently sits just behind the bleeding edge. If a team constantly swaps core architecture for the newest shiny object, velocity stalls. Instead, we need a predictable, accelerated pace for tool adoption that fits into the team’s collective brain without causing whiplash.
This requires a specific archetype of technical leader: someone deeply anchored in “traditional” production engineering, security, and DevOps, but possessing the pragmatism to integrate AI acceleration safely. While individual devs need a security-conscious mindset to protect their environments, the team level is where that mindset becomes mission-critical. It’s the ultimate gatekeeper for what code actually reaches production.
To prevent total divergence, teams must actively invest in intentional knowledge sharing and inspiration sessions. If we don’t intentionally bridge the gap between individual flow and collective guardrails, we risk fracturing our engineering culture.
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