I agree for a slightly different reason - human stupidity.
Despite many decades of proof that automation simplifies and reveals the illogical in organisations, digitisation has mostly stopped at below the “CXO” level - and so there are not APIs or CLIs available to anyone - but MCP is cutting through
Just consider:
Throughout companies large and small, Agile is what coders do, real project managers still use deadlines and upfront design of what will be in the deadline - so any attempt to convert the whole company to react to the reality of the road is blocked
Reports flow upwards - but through the reporting chain. So those PowerPoints are … massaged to meet to correct story, and the more levels it’s massaged the more it fails to resemble reality. Everyone knows this but managing the transition means potentially losing control …
There are plenty of digitisationmprojects going on - but do they enable full automation or are they another case of an existing political arena building its own political choices in software - “our area in a database to be accessed via an UI by our people” - almost never “our area to be used by others via API and totally replacing our people”.
(I think I need to be more persuasive
I'm with you on this (I think). Digitising my org is much easier if I can assume my colleagues' agents will be acting on their behalf. Even if I can't convince most humans to cooperate with solutions, I can usually trust their agents to do so. MCP hides the wiring somewhat, which I enjoy.