In almost every enterprise AI conversation right now, someone eventually says the same thing: “Tokens are basically free.” I understand why people say it. If the expensive part of building with AI was inference, then cheaper tokens should unlock everything. But that assumption hides a bigger problem. The real cost of enterprise AI was never just the tokens. It was the messy human work required to turn a probabilistic answer into something a business is willing to bet on.
I’ve started seeing the same pattern play out in enterprise agent deployments. A team lets an advanced coding agent loose on a sprawling, decades-old monolithic service, targeting a move to a modern microservices architecture. The agent spends hours autonomously iterating on a large pull request, running local test suites, and fixing its own syntax errors. When the run finishes, the compute bill is often the smallest part of the exercise.
The real invoice arrives the next morning. A senior architect inherits a massive PR with thousands of lines of modified code. Because the agent iterated blindly against the compiler simply to get the tests to pass, it introduced architectural debt: it duplicated data structures, bypassed established caching patterns, and broke shared utilities. The architect spends the next day untangling the mess, tracing regressions, and ultimately rejecting the PR. The tokens were cheap, but the task itself was incredibly expensive.
For most of modern computing, the race was about making computation cheaper and faster. Now we are entering a world where the computer can generate changes faster than the organization can safely absorb them. AI isn’t eliminating the enterprise bottleneck. It is reversing the historical economics of software. Computation is becoming the easy part, and human coordination is becoming the scarce resource.
The uncomfortable realization is that we spent the last decade trying to remove humans from software delivery, only to discover that humans were not the bottleneck we thought they were. They were the control system. When you treat intelligence as an effectively unlimited resource, the operational friction doesn’t disappear. It simply migrates up the stack. We’ve spent years assuming that if we could just automate the code generation, the governance would take care of itself. It just won’t.
The irony is that the first problems appear exactly where we expected the magic to happen: inside the loops themselves. We assume this cycle is free because the tokens are cheap. But errors in these systems compound. The next decision is built entirely on the assumptions created by the previous one. If an agent makes the wrong assumption early, the next several iterations can become an expensive exercise in fixing the consequences of that original mistake. You aren’t scaling capability. You are spending more compute and latency cleaning up mistakes the system created for itself.
The raw economics here are deeply deceptive. The system doesn’t eliminate cost; it simply transfers it from GPUs to people. The model finishes its run in a few hours, but the humans inherit the uncertainty. They now have to reconstruct the reasoning, validate the assumptions, and decide whether the output is safe to ship. Ultimately, the bottleneck has moved from creation to trust.
If you push this architecture to its logical endpoint, you end up with agents optimizing other agents, adjusting prompts, retrieval strategies, and evaluation criteria overnight. The assumption is that another layer of AI can evaluate and improve the first layer. But enterprise software rarely has a perfect definition of success. The danger is that the system starts optimizing what it can measure instead of what the business actually values. It learns how to pass the tests, not necessarily how to preserve the architecture. This is the enterprise version of Goodhart’s Law.
The counter-argument sounds compelling: run enough experiments, and one breakthrough will justify all the failures. Platform developers will tell you that a mature agent architecture operates in an ephemeral sandbox, meaning unsuccessful runs can simply be deleted without leaving a single line of messy code behind. But enterprise software is not a lottery where losing tickets disappear without cost. Even if the code branch is cleanly deleted, the human time spent defining the task, managing the system, and reviewing the failure logs to understand why it missed the mark is still a massive tax on engineering velocity.
The other defense is that AI will simply review AI, relying on an ensemble of specialized judge models or rigid pipeline checks to audit the output. Proponents argue that if your CI/CD and regression testing suites are robust enough, bad architecture will be caught automatically. This assumes enterprise systems possess perfect, exhaustive test environments that capture subtle structural intent, which is almost never true for a legacy codebase. A system can easily pass every automated integration test while still producing structurally unmaintainable garbage that requires a human to untangle.
Without deterministic verification layers, entire ensembles can become highly confident about the same incorrect conclusion. Many enterprise AI deployments will fail not because the models aren’t intelligent enough, but because leadership is rather blind to the sheer cost of coordinating intelligent systems.
If spinning loops doesn’t automatically reduce the total cost of delivery, we have to change how we build. The answer isn’t longer execution loops; it’s a completely different control architecture. We need systems that preserve state instead of repeatedly reconstructing it. We need ways to summarize intent rather than syntax, so humans review decisions instead of thousands of generated lines. And we need deterministic boundaries where software takes over: business rules, financial limits, and termination conditions should not be negotiated by another language model. If a system detects a strict logic circle, such as executing multiple consecutive iterations without a change in environment state, the infrastructure should kill the loop instantly.
The history of computing has largely been about reducing the cost of computation. AI changes the problem. Computation is becoming abundant. Coordination isn’t though. As token prices collapse, coordination costs increasingly become the dominant constraint in many enterprise AI systems. The companies that win this phase won’t be the ones running the biggest models or the longest loops. They’ll be the ones that understand where autonomy helps, and where another loop is simply avoiding a decision.
The irony is that the companies that win enterprise AI may not be the ones that automate the most work. They may be the ones that build the best judgment systems around the work machines can already do.
Cheap intelligence is abundant. Reliable outcomes aren’t. That’s the real loop trap.
