Why AI can’t replace Coaches
You may have read too many pieces claiming the Agile coach role is dead.
Just like Agile itself is dead. And the PO and SM roles (which we’ve just seen is not true).
Think about it for a moment: in a world where AI is accelerating delivery and automating parts of the work, coaching becomes even more important, not less!
"Individuals and interactions over processes and tools" - The Agile Manifesto
Agile started as a response to overly rigid, document-heavy processes. But when teams let AI take over roles like PO and SM, the outputs might look clean and complete, neatly formatted, technically correct… but something vital is missing.
Because when you skip the conversation, you also skip the shared understanding.
A coach holds space that fosters real thinking by saying, “Let’s slow down here.”
A coach helps teams ask the awkward questions and talk about blockers that aren’t technical. They notice when the team is rushing or avoiding something. They reconnect the team to their users, their purpose, and each other.
As AI becomes more present in the room, the coach is the one who makes sure people are still listening to themselves and each other.
Because agility was never just about delivering faster - it was about delivering better, together.
The Agile coach isn’t a relic of the past; they’re the future-proof safeguard against teams losing their human edge.
In a room full of tools, templates, and AI-generated outputs, the coach is the one who says, “Yes, but what does this really mean for us?”
That role doesn’t die with AI. If anything, it becomes indispensable.
Want to talk about keeping Agile human? Reach out to Freya Finnerty today!