Do not hire someone because they "know Claude Code."
That is not the skill. Tools change too fast.
The real AI person is not the one who knows the latest interface. It is the one who can look at your company and say:
- This workflow is worth rebuilding. This one is not.
- This can be automated. This needs a human.
- This saves 12 hours a week. This creates compliance risk.
- This looks impressive, but will not move revenue.
- This boring internal process is actually where the money is.
Most companies are about to hire people who are good at using AI tools. Fine. But the real leverage is not tool usage. It is judgment.
Where is the upside? Where is the risk? Where does AI make the business faster, cheaper, clearer, or more scalable? Where does it create garbage at scale?
Knowing Claude Code is useful. Knowing what should be rebuilt because AI exists is the actual job.
What to do with this
When you evaluate an "AI hire" or an AI consultant, do not ask for a tool demo. Hand them one of your real workflows and ask one question: should this exist at all? The answer tells you whether you are buying hands or judgment. Hands are everywhere now. Judgment is the scarce asset.