{"slug": "your-company-won-t-replace-you-with-good-ai-they-ll-replace-you-with-bad-ai", "title": "Your company won't replace you with good AI. They'll replace you with bad AI.", "summary": "The article argues that the primary threat to software developers is not advanced AI that outperforms them, but rather mediocre AI that is \"good enough\" for cost-cutting executives to justify reducing headcount. It explains that business incentives favor short-term savings over code quality, leading to a cycle where AI-generated \"vibe debt\" creates hidden problems that are later fixed at a higher cost by a skeleton crew. The author concludes that developers' best defense is to cultivate skills like systems thinking and debugging intuition, which cannot be easily replaced by a cheap AI subscription.", "body_md": "The CEO doesn't want an AI writing better code than you. They want an AI writing code for cheaper than you.\nThat's the part most developers get wrong when they think about the AI threat to their careers.\nWe keep debating whether AI can match a senior engineer's output. If it can have a real understanding of architecture. If it can think through edge cases.\nNone of that matters to the person approving headcount. The question in the boardroom isn't \"Is this AI as good as Sarah?\" It's \"Is this AI good enough to skip hiring Sarah's replacement?\"\nThose are two completely different questions. However, only one of them determines your future.\nThere's a term gaining traction in developer circles: vibe debt. It describes the specific flavor of technical debt that AI-generated code creates — code that looks right, passes a cursory review, maybe even works today, but carries hidden rot.\nIt's the kind of code that makes you say \"this feels off\" without being able to immediately point to why. That's how it got its name.\nHere's the thing about vibe debt: it doesn't show up on a quarterly report. You know what does show up? The salary line item that just got eliminated.\n→ AI slop ships on Tuesday\n→ The bug surfaces in October\n→ The dev who could've caught it was laid off in March\n→ A contractor gets hired at 2x the cost to fix it\nThis situation has been happening since the beginning of outsourcing. The only difference is that now we have a new type that creates pull requests.\nBusiness incentives favor cost-cutting over code quality. This isn't cynicism. It's just how quarterly earnings work.\nA Vice President doesn't receive a promotion because they \"maintained excellent code health across the platform.\" It's because they \"reduced engineering spend by 40%.\" What drives people are the rewards they seek.\nSo when a mediocre AI tool can generate a feature that mostly works, that's not a failure to the person holding the budget. It’s considered successful. Ship it, file the bugs later, let the remaining skeleton crew deal with the fallout.\nI have seen this happening before with offshore outsourcing, with no-code tools, with every \"developers are too expensive\" trend. The process is always identical:\n→ Replace skilled people with a cheaper alternative\n→ Declare victory for two quarters\n→ Quietly hire specialists to clean up the mess\n→ Never acknowledge the total cost was higher\nAI just makes the first step more convincing. 🎯\nIf the threat isn't brilliant AI but mediocre AI in the hands of aggressive cost-cutters, then your defense isn't \"be slightly better than GPT at writing functions.\"\nYou are defending being the individual who \"gets\" the why of broken things. The person who can enter a repository full of vibe debt and reliably determine it. The person the suits phone after their AI-first approach begins spewing production incidents.\nThe skills that matter most in this world:\n→ Systems thinking — understanding how components interact, not just how to generate them\n→ Debugging intuition — the AI can write code but it can't feel the wrongness in a stack trace at 2 AM\n→ Organizational trust — being the person a team actually believes when you say \"this will break\"\nA cost-cutter can't replace any of those with a $20/month subscription.\nThe developers who are in the most danger are not the ones who can’t keep up with AI. It’s the ones who work at organizations where the leadership sees engineering as an expensive cost to be cut, rather than an essential capability to be grown.\nThe AI isn't the threat. The spreadsheet is.\nSo here's my question for you: Have you seen this pattern emerge within your company — not AI replacing devs outright, but AI being used by leadership as a reason to shrink teams below what they should be? And what happened next?", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/your-company-won-t-replace-you-with-good-ai-they-ll-replace-you-with-bad-ai", "canonical_source": "https://dev.to/adioof/your-company-wont-replace-you-with-good-ai-theyll-replace-you-with-bad-ai-5bpm", "published_at": "2026-05-22 16:06:37+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-05-22 16:38:43.255095+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["artificial-intelligence", "developer-tools", "enterprise-software", "startups"], "entities": ["Sarah"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/your-company-won-t-replace-you-with-good-ai-they-ll-replace-you-with-bad-ai", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/your-company-won-t-replace-you-with-good-ai-they-ll-replace-you-with-bad-ai.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/your-company-won-t-replace-you-with-good-ai-they-ll-replace-you-with-bad-ai.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/your-company-won-t-replace-you-with-good-ai-they-ll-replace-you-with-bad-ai.jsonld"}}