AI tools are changing how code gets written. The question isn't whether that matters for your career. It's what you're going to do about it.
You already know AI can generate boilerplate, debug straightforward issues, and scaffold features faster than you can type them. What most developers haven't figured out yet is which parts of their work are getting easier to replace, and which parts are becoming more valuable. That gap is where careers either stall or accelerate.
This book isn't another guide about prompt engineering or learning to type faster with AI assistance. It's a practical roadmap for working software developers who want to stay valuable and keep advancing as AI becomes standard in every engineering workflow.
Written by Ivan McNair, who has spent 25+ years leading technology teams through large-scale transformations in banking and financial services across North America, Europe, and Asia, this book cuts through the hype and gives you concrete frameworks for adapting before the shift happens around you.
You'll learn how to:
Identify which tasks in your current role are "commodity work" versus "judgment work," and why that distinction now determines your trajectoryShift from being a ticket-closer to a system owner in 90 days, using a step-by-step plan you can start this weekWork with AI tools without letting them quietly erode the skills that actually make you irreplaceableBuild a skill stack that compounds: technical depth, domain understanding, reliable delivery, and influence over what gets builtUse specific prompt patterns and workflows that amplify your strengths instead of just making you faster at low-value tasksSpot the AI traps that undermine even strong engineers: skill erosion, security gaps, and the "free speed" illusionDesign deliberate career bets that hold up as tools keep evolvingThis book includes real scenarios, practical checklists, weekly self-checks, and a 30/60/90-day action plan that moves you from understanding the problem to actually repositioning yourself in your current job.
Whether you're mid-level and wondering which direction to grow, senior and trying to stay ahead of younger engineers using AI effectively, or a tech lead figuring out how to help your team adapt, this book gives you a clear map.
The engineers who look back on this period as career-defining won't be the ones who learned the newest tools fastest. They'll be the ones who saw where the real value was shifting and deliberately built their careers around judgment, ownership, and the parts of the job that tools can't replicate.
The shift is already happening. This book helps you shape it instead of reacting to it.