- Company Sizes: Small, Mid-Size, Large - Roles: Tech, Product, Non-Tech
How much time do you foresee developers or companies dedicating to prompt engineering?
I understand this question is quite open-ended, but I'm eager to gather perspectives.
Bonus points for the likelihood of a dedicated prompt engineer role if the engineer can apply their wizardry across many aspects of the company. This kind of reminds me of the OSS (operational systems support) team I used to be part of, and still miss. In this team we applied mostly custom software solutions to any team that needed it. We worked hard to find customers within the company to earn our keep, else we would get laid off at the next convenient chance. I imagine prompt engineers, if given the chance, should work hard to find value and not just wait for the work to come to them.
There may also be a very large segment of the population that are small business entrepreneurs with only AI and/or robotic "employees".
There will be a very popular category of AI/robotic "co-founder" agent that does the "prompt engineering" for you to set up and reconfigure your business by selecting the team of bots and specifying instructions for them.
We will also start to see more and more anticipatory companion agents that somehow monitor the stream of input that you consume as well as your output and just predict and produce much of what you want before you request it.
I personally don't see a big future in traditional jobs.