Project Management

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Will the widespread adoption of prompt engineering commoditize project management skills, or can it help PMs differentiate themselves and command higher value?

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Sarah Philbrick
PMI Team Member
Director, Learning Design & Development| PMI Asheville, NC, United States

Hi PMI Community! I’m Sarah Philbrick, and I work as a Product Manager at PMI with a focus on our learning offerings. As we go on this skill-building journey together, I’m excited to engage in meaningful conversations, explore trending topics, and learn from each other.

Reflecting on one such topic, GenAI and prompt engineering, I am interested to hear your perspective on commoditization vs. differentiation.

Will the widespread adoption of prompt engineering commoditize project management skills, or can it help PMs differentiate themselves and command higher value?

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Archana Dengi Tata communications Limited Gulbarga, KA, India
With use of AI as your personal assistant who does task basis your prompt, you get a time create more value to a project, more strategic version of project for your company
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Ricardo Oseguera-Cardona Las Vegas, NV, United States

I believe the widespread adoption of prompt engineering in project management can help PMs by evolving with today's world. The AI will need someone to be able to engineer these prompts and give it the direction it needs to be able to provide useful information. The human on the other side will need to have the skills and knowledge necessary to prompt the AI successfully.

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Latha Pai Cypress, TX, United States

I feel that the use of Prompt engineering will enable the PMs to better use the various AI tools. It will not commoditize the PM skills because the PM brings skills that AI cannot like problem solving, decision making etc . So that way, PMs will always have a higher value. Another example is in risk identification. AI might be able to identify potential risks but mitigation and problem solving has to be done by PM.

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Vivek Gulati Vice President| Deloitte Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
Prompt engineering will commoditize the lower end of project management, but it can also help strong PMs differentiate and command higher value. The split is simple: if a PM’s value is mostly producing plans, notes, status updates, and basic risk logs, AI will compress that value quickly; if their value is in judgment, orchestration, stakeholder alignment, and turning AI into better delivery outcomes, their value can rise.
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Samir Goswami Senior Project Management| Thomson Reuters Bengaluru, KA, India

Prompt engineering is redefining the role of project manager. Definitely, it has improved the productivity compared to earlier days - whether it is risk mitigation, generating report for leadership team, planning for the delivery etc. As a project manager need to stay up-to-date with the AI advancement to contribute more effectively. I do not believe that AI can completely replace the PM role.

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Sreesudha Ayyalasomayajula Software Project Manager| ZF group New Hudson, MI, United States
Prompt engineering will absolutely commoditize transactional, low-level project management skills—such as basic status reporting, meeting summarization, and simple schedule generation—turning them into cheap, automated tasks.
However, it will simultaneously allow strategic PMs to differentiate themselves and command significantly higher value.
The division comes down to execution versus governance:
  • The Commodity Trap: PMs who act merely as "data routers" or administrative gatekeepers will be replaced by AI agents that can draft updates and track tasks instantly using basic prompts.
  • The High-Value Differentiator: Elite PMs will use prompt engineering to instantly analyze massive datasets, model complex risk scenarios, and automate operational friction. By offloading administrative cognitive load to AI, they free up their time to focus on what AI cannot replicate: strategic alignment, navigating company politics, managing complex stakeholder relationships, and driving ethical AI governance.
The Bottom Line: Prompt engineering won't replace project managers, but project managers who master prompt engineering will rapidly replace those who don't.
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Denise Warthen Pflugerville, Texas, United States

Prompt engineering is more likely to help PMs stand out rather than make their skills less valuable. While AI can automate tasks like creating reports, summarizing meetings, and organizing project information, it cannot replace the human skills that are essential to project management. Successful PMs still need strong leadership, communication, problem-solving, and decision-making abilities.

Prompt engineering can make project managers more efficient by helping them gather information faster, improve communication, and spend less time on repetitive tasks. This allows them to focus on building relationships with stakeholders, managing teams, and keeping projects aligned with business goals.

As AI becomes more common, knowing how to write effective prompts may become a basic professional skill, similar to using project management software. However, PMs who combine AI knowledge with strong project management fundamentals will have an advantage. They can use technology to improve project outcomes while still providing the strategic thinking and leadership that AI cannot replicate. For this reason, I see prompt engineering as a tool that can increase the value of project managers rather than replace them.

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