Will AI Replace the Trainer—Or Just the PowerPoint?
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Three trainers who've collectively spent thousands of days in the room—physical and virtual—sit with a question that's been nagging at them: what happens to training when AI shows up?
Mark opens with a scenario. Your trainee texts you at 11pm, panicking before their first PI Planning. You're asleep. They muddle through. But imagine they had an AI buddy from the course—one that knew the context and answered instantly. Relief that they got help? Or quiet terror that you just became optional?
The conversation moves through what AI might extend and what it might erode. Stephan shares how his AI agent reframed his role: stop being a "knowledge dispenser" and become a "wisdom cultivator." The content isn't the hard part anymore. The hard part is helping people navigate what they don't know when they're in the thick of it. Ali picks up the thread but surfaces what's missing: AI can't interject. It can't say "whoa, stop—we need to zoom in right here." Chatbots are polite companions. Trainers sometimes need to be challengers.
They explore practice and simulation—if someone rehearses a retrospective 50 times with an AI before trying it for real, do they arrive with justified confidence or false confidence? AI is infinitely patient in ways humans aren't. And Ali raises his "doomsday" scenario: if everyone privately asks ChatGPT instead of raising their hand, do we lose the brave question? The one that cracks things open for the whole room?
The James Bond jiggle—courtesy of absent Niko—produces unexpected depth. Stephan casts Q as the on-the-job AI (efficient, tool-focused, never teaches why) and M as the classroom trainer. Mark chooses Blofeld for AI—omnipresent, enabling, but creating dependency—and Daniel Craig's scarred Bond for the human trainer who learned everything the hard way.
The episode lands on two complementary edges: Ali's conviction that AI extends the trainer rather than replaces them, and Mark's sharper take—"If you think your job is to teach people what's on the PowerPoint slides, AI is going to replace you." Stephan's closing haiku captures it: "AI gives answers fast, but struggle builds the muscle—mirror, not rescue."