My first "productivity tool" was a pencil and a clipboard.
I was 22. Working the floor of a lumber yard in 1972. Counting board feet. Writing up customer orders by hand. The clipboard never crashed. The pencil never needed an update.
I didn't touch a computer until the late 1980s.
By the mid-90s I was writing C and C++. By 2005 I was leading a core development team building retail software. By 2008 I had my own training company teaching Scrum.
Now, in 2026, I use AI every single day. To write code. To review code. To plan workshops. To find gaps in my own thinking.
The tools have changed completely. Four times over, maybe five.
But one thing has never changed.
The people who do the best work are the ones who think clearly about the problem before they reach for a tool.
In the lumber yard, the best salespeople listened first. They didn't just quote prices. They asked what you were building.
The best developers I've trained do the same thing. They define the problem before they open an IDE. They write a test before they write code. They ask the AI a good question before they accept its answer.
The tool is never the point.
The thinking is.
Whatever tools come next — and they will — that won't change.
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