TL;DR: The Bottom Line Up Front
Agentic AI is hitting the market hard in 2025, but success isn’t about building autonomous super-agents.
It’s about engineering reliable, focused systems that own specific workflows.
The companies winning with Agentic AI are those that understand the magic is in the wrapper, not the model, and that smaller, purpose-built agents consistently outperform rigid “do-everything” solutions.
What I’m Seeing This Week
Three perspectives caught my attention this week that capture where Agentic AI is heading, and where the real value lies.
1. Engineering Reality Over AI Magic – Alex Wang’s latest piece on building reliable AI agents reflects what we’ve learned at Valere.
Her core insight: “LLMs are just stateless functions. If you want something dependable, it’s all about how you engineer the wrapper.” This isn’t about dampening excitement; it’s about focusing on what works.
After deploying AI systems for more than 100 clients, I can confirm that the breakthrough isn’t just in the model’s intelligence; it’s in how you structure the control flow, handle errors, and manage context windows.
Key takeaway: Stop waiting for the “perfect AI model.” Start building better systems around the models you have.
2. The Spectrum Strategy – Anthony Alcaraz nailed something important about the future of Agentic AI: it exists on a spectrum between determinism and autonomy.
This isn’t a binary choice; it’s about finding the right balance for each specific use case.
His example of Kakao’s shopping assistant is telling. They started with one powerful AI trying to handle everything, but it only worked 65% of the time. So, they switched to multiple smaller, specialized AI tools working together. The result? A much simpler system that worked better than the “smarter” AI.
The pattern emerging: Constrained autonomy delivers better results than unlimited freedom.
3. The $3.3B Reality Check – Pascal BORNET’s newsletter highlighted some massive industry moves, including a $3.3B Agentic AI investment. But here’s what’s interesting: the money is flowing toward practical applications, not science fiction scenarios.
The companies succeeding with Agentic AI are those solving specific, measurable problems: customer service automation, supply chain optimization, and fraud detection.
They’re not building general-purpose agents; they’re building specialized tools that happen to use AI.
What The Data Shows
Let me cut through the hype with some real numbers:
- 25% of enterprises using GenAI will deploy Agentic AI pilots in 2025 (Deloitte)
- But 40% of Agentic AI projects will be canceled by 2027 due to unclear ROI (Gartner)
- Only 1% of companies believe they’re at AI maturity despite massive investments (McKinsey)
Translation: We’re in the experimental phase, and most companies are still figuring out where AI adds real value.
The Valere Perspective: What We’re Building
At Valere, we’ve moved away from trying to build one “super intelligent” agent. Instead, we’re focusing on:
Workflow-First Design
- Map the human process first
- Identify where AI adds genuine value
- Build deterministic paths with AI at specific decision points
Composable Intelligence
- Small, focused agents that do one thing extremely well
- Clear handoffs between human and AI tasks
- Easy to test, debug, and improve individual components
Reliability Over Magic
- Prefer predictable behavior over impressive demos
- Build in error handling and fallback mechanisms
- Measure success by business outcomes, not AI sophistication
Three Practical Recommendations
For Founders: Don’t chase the Agentic AI hype.
- Start with one specific, measurable problem where AI can improve your existing workflow. Build from there.
For CTOs: The bottleneck isn’t intelligence; it’s reliability and integration.
- Invest more in your AI infrastructure and control systems than in more powerful models.
For Product Teams: The best Agentic AI amplifies human decision-making rather than trying to replicate it.
- Design for human-AI collaboration, not AI replacement.
Worth Your Time
Books:
- “Agentic Artificial Intelligence: Harnessing AI Agents to Reinvent Business, Work and Life” by Pascal Bornet – The definitive guide to understanding where Agentic AI is heading
- “Co-Intelligence: Living and Working with AI by Ethan Mollick – Essential reading on human-AI collaboration (exactly what we’re building toward)
Articles:
- “Build Reliable AI Agents That Actually Work — Using LLMs” by Alex Wang – The engineering reality behind the hype.
- “Seizing the Agentic AI Advantage” by McKinsey – Data-driven insights on what’s working in enterprise deployments.
- “AI Agents in 2025: Expectations vs. Reality” by IBM – Cuts through the hype with expert perspectives on what’s realistic.
The Week Ahead
I’m watching three key areas:
- Enterprise adoption patterns – Which use cases are making it to production?
- Integration frameworks – How are companies connecting AI agents to existing systems?
- ROI measurement – What metrics are successful companies using to evaluate Agentic AI?
Final Thought
The future isn’t about AI agents that can do everything. It’s about AI agents that can do specific things perfectly, reliably, and at scale.
The companies that understand this distinction will be the ones that deliver value in 2025.
So, the question isn’t “How intelligent can we make our AI?”
It’s “How can we engineer systems that solve real problems consistently?”
That’s where the real opportunity lies. What’s your take on Agentic AI?
