For simple tasks and code that doesn't change much over time, programmers don't add a lot of value over what an LLM can provide. It's easy to prompt your way to a good-enough tool for a small and exclusive set of users. Managing complexity beyond that is where a real programmer provides value.
Experienced developers provide a deep understanding of what's possible, knowing what to build, how to avoid pitfalls, how to adapt to new requirements. The expertise is in managing projects that evolve over time, meet the needs of hundreds to thousands of users, interact with external systems, have meaningful compliance, performance, and security requirements, etc.
We were supposed to build it for them because it didn't have enough features and was expensive.
I have great concerns your last paragraph is wishful thinking. I want to believe, but I also saw him, a marketer by degree, actually solve the problem better than the $600/mo software.
Why can't you have AI Answer these questions?
>Domain expertise + AI tools
Wouldn't they be the expert in their own job?