When I talk to business owners about software development today, the term "Artificial Intelligence" inevitably comes up. Most nod knowingly and tell me about ChatGPT, which their employees use for emails. That's a start — but it's roughly like using the Internet only to send faxes.
AI-First means something fundamentally different. And I am convinced: companies that fail to understand and implement this approach now will face massive problems staying competitive within three to five years.
What Does AI-First Actually Mean?
AI-First is not a marketing term and not a trend to follow blindly. It describes a paradigm shift: Artificial Intelligence is not retrofitted onto existing processes but stands at the center of every decision from the very beginning.
The difference is best explained with a comparison:
- AI-Enhanced (the common approach): A company has an existing process — say, customer support via email — and adds a chatbot. AI is an add-on, a nice extra.
- AI-First: The company asks: "If we were to completely rethink customer support today, with everything AI can do — what would that look like?" The answer looks entirely different from an email inbox with a chatbot.
In our own work at Today is Life, we implement this approach consistently. Every new software project does not begin with the question "Where can we add AI?" but rather "How would an AI solve this problem, and where do we need the human?"
Why Is Now the Right Time?
I hear this question constantly. The honest answer: the right time was a year ago. The second-best time is now.
Three developments make early 2026 a decisive moment:
1. AI Tools Have Become Production-Ready
Back in 2024, most AI tools were impressive demos but often too unreliable for professional use. That has fundamentally changed. Tools like Claude Code from Anthropic — which we use daily — are no longer toys. They reliably produce code at a level that was unthinkable two years ago.
A concrete example from our daily work: A complex database migration with multiple tables, relationships, and validation rules that would have cost an experienced developer half a day now takes under an hour — including tests and documentation.
2. The Cost Structure Is Tipping
The costs for AI-powered development have been falling rapidly for months. At the same time, salaries for software developers continue to rise. This means: companies that consistently use AI have a growing cost advantage over those that don't. This advantage is not linear — it's exponential, because AI-powered teams iterate faster, learn faster, and deliver faster.
3. The Competition Isn't Sleeping
According to a Bitkom study from late 2025, 68% of German companies are already experimenting with AI in software development. But only 12% have implemented a genuine AI-First strategy. This gap is your opportunity — but only if you act now.
What This Means in Practice
AI-First is not about replacing developers. It's about giving them superpowers. In our team, AI-powered development has led to:
- 40-60% faster development cycles
- Significantly fewer bugs through AI-generated tests
- Better documentation (because AI never tires of writing docs)
- More time for creative problem-solving and architecture
The developers who were initially skeptical are now the biggest advocates. Not because AI took their work away — but because it took away the tedious parts.
How to Get Started
My recommendation for companies wanting to adopt the AI-First approach:
- Start with a pilot project. Don't try to transform everything at once. Choose one new project and approach it consistently with AI-First.
- Invest in training. Your team needs to learn how to work with AI tools effectively. This is not intuitive — it requires practice.
- Measure the results. Compare development time, code quality, and customer satisfaction before and after.
- Scale what works. Once the pilot project proves successful, gradually apply the approach to other projects.
Conclusion
AI-First is not a question of whether, but when. Companies that take this step now secure a competitive advantage that will be very difficult to catch up with later. Not because AI is magic — but because it fundamentally changes how we build, test, and deliver software.
The question is not whether your company can afford an AI-First strategy. The question is whether you can afford not to have one.