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CommentaryAI agents

The supervisor class: how AI agents are remaking the developer’s career

By
Mohith Shrivastava
Mohith Shrivastava
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By
Mohith Shrivastava
Mohith Shrivastava
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 31, 2026, 9:40 AM ET
Mohith Shrivastava is principal developer advocate at Salesforce. He previously worked at CodeScience, PwC and Deloitte.
The rise of the supervisor class is just beginning.
The rise of the supervisor class is just beginning.Getty Images
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For decades, the image of the software developer has been one of a solitary architect hunched over a glowing integrated development environment (IDE) and terminal, translating complex business logic into thousands of lines of syntax. Success was often measured by a developer’s ability to act as a living dictionary of commands and a precise debugger of semicolons. But we are entering a new era. The introduction of agentic tools and AI-assisted “vibe coding” is fundamentally transforming the developer workflow. We are witnessing the rise of the “Supervisor Class” — a shift where the developer’s primary value is no longer the manual production of code, but the high-level orchestration of autonomous agents.

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The Rise of the Supervisor Class

The developer’s role is moving to a higher plane. Previously, a workflow involved understanding a business need, drafting high-level and low-level designs, and then typing out every single line of code. Today, the last two steps are largely handled by agents. A developer now prompts a system with goals and requirements, allowing the agent to complete the task.

In this new reality, the terminal is becoming a more powerful tool than traditional UI builders because it acts as the central hub for overseeing autonomous loops. The developer no longer just writes; they review, refine, and direct. The core value proposition has shifted from the rote memorization of syntax to the application of high-level judgment.

The Death of Syntax and the Birth of Agent Skills

In this reimagined workflow, remembering 50 or 60 specific terminal commands is no longer a bottleneck. While fundamental knowledge of what these commands do remains necessary, the need to memorize granular syntax is fading. In its place, the industry is adopting agent skills — modular, natural-language instructions that teach an agent how to bridge its own knowledge gaps.

Agent skills solve one of the most persistent frustrations in early AI coding: the “forgetting” problem. Standard prompts are transient, and large language models (LLMs) suffer from limited context windows; once a conversation gets too long, the model loses its edge. Agent skills act as a modular, indexed framework — much like the chapters of a book — allowing an agent to pull in only the specific knowledge it needs for a task. This allows developers to build a persistent “second brain” within their project repositories, ensuring that if an agent learns a best practice or a project-specific architectural rule once, it retains it going forward.

Vibe Coding with Guardrails

The shift toward vibe coding has its skeptics. Without structure, vibe coding can lead to low-quality AI output, the so-called “slop,” producing code that looks right but fails to meet production security or performance standards. The new architecture of collaboration requires reimagining the Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC) with built-in guardrails. Enterprises are now embedding linters, security scanners, and deterministic workflows directly into the agentic loop.

The need for a structured foundation is why the myth that SaaS platforms are irrelevant is at odds with enterprise reality. When developers vibe code an entire architecture from scratch, they inadvertently create a massive hidden tax: a sprawling surface area of raw code that they must then maintain, secure, and operate. The resulting management overhead — spending elite engineering time correcting outputs and paying the high token costs of ungrounded prompts — eventually outweighs the initial speed of creation.

Agentic SaaS platforms provide the necessary metadata and secure infrastructure that allow agents to execute tasks — from billing support to promotional queries — with the accuracy required for production. Agent skills are still valuable. When deployed within a platform where the security and scalability foundations are already established, agent skills become a massive accelerator for developers to rapidly build high-value capabilities on top of the platform.

Managing a Team of Sub-Agents

The modern developer’s daily life is increasingly spent managing a flat team of specialized sub-agents. Rather than one monolithic AI agent, developers are orchestrating sequential or parallel workflows between agents specialized in front-end code, security reviews, or testing.

We see this shift in how organizations are already scaling. Lennar, one of the largest homebuilders in the U.S., now deploys 1.1 million agentic workflows per month to help keep more customers engaged, increase conversion rates, and shorten the sales cycle. Similarly, paper tablet maker reMarkable launched its first AI agent in just three weeks; it has resolved more than 10,500 customer inquiries with an NPS score that matches its human support team.

For companies like these, the supervisor class of developers isn’t just writing code; they are building the skills and orchestration layers that allow these agents to function as a seamless extension of the workforce.

From Productivity to Quality: The New Metrics

If an agent can generate 1,000 lines of code in ten seconds, lines of code and raw velocity are no longer meaningful metrics for a developer’s productivity. In fact, more code often means more surface area for bugs.

We must shift our focus to the Agentic Work Unit, — the discrete task accomplished by an AI agent. At Salesforce, our own agentic implementation highlights this shift. Our support agents now handle 96% of cases autonomously, and we’ve saved over 50,000 seller hours by letting agents handle the “admin” of sales.

For developers, the Agentic Work Unit means measuring how they can leverage agents to solve complex problems with minimal friction. Success should be measured by software quality: Have we reduced the bug count? Is the architecture more resilient? Are we shipping features that actually solve user problems, rather than just filling repositories?

By moving away from token consumption as a metric and toward work quality, we empower developers to focus on what humans do best: exercise judgment, apply empathy to user needs, and design systems that are built to last.

The Enduring Need for Human Intent

We are in the early days of this transition, reminiscent of when developers first began sharing modules on Node Package Manager (NPM) or Maven. Soon, we will see global “Agent Skill Exchanges” where developers share modular agent instructions for everything from technical blogging to SEO and complex algorithmic logic.

The future belongs to the developer who masters the ability to break down human expertise into reusable agent skills. By stepping into the role of the supervisor, developers aren’t being replaced. They are finally being freed from the drudgery of syntax to focus on the one thing AI cannot replicate: the high-level judgment required to build the future of software.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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By Mohith Shrivastava
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