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The Manager's Path: the guts of chapters 5 and 6
This is part 3 of X of my summary of Camille Fournier’s “The Manager’s Path”. Part one is here and part 2 is here.
Ch05 - Managing multiple teams
- Engineering directors won’t necessarily be writing code every day
- Be realistic about your schedule - any code you write will be slow
- Code reviews are a good way to stay in practice
- Spend time to gain mastery of at least one language before moving into management
- Try to keep a half-day a week free from meetings and use this for something creative
- Understand the difference between important and urgent tasks
- Important but not urgent: preparing for meetings so you can guide them in a healthy way
- Pushing an efficient meeting culture down to your teams can win back a lot of time
- Look around the room during meetings to gauge engagement - if everyone’s asleep, it’s wasting their time
- You’ll get better at delegation and decisions over time
- Use the simple/complex versus frequent/infrequent grid to figure out what you should do versus what you should delegate
- Simple & frequent: delegate
- Simple & infrequent: do it yourself
- Complex & frequent: delegate carefully
- Complex & infrequent: delegate as a training opportunity
- Strategies for saying NO: use the “yes, and” approach
- Combining positivity while articulating boundaries of what’s possible will get you into the management major leagues
- Strategies for saying NO: creat policies
- When you start repeating youself, you’ve got the basis for a reasonable policy
- Making a policy enables your team to know what they need to do to get a yes
- Strategies for saying NO: “Help me say yes”
- Ask questions and dig in on the questionable details
- Curious interrogation of ideas can help you say no and teach at the same time
- Strategies for saying NO: Work as a team
- Don’t prevaricate: better to say no quickly than delay and drag it out
- Questions to ask yourself: Do I know wha’s expected of me? Do I have what I need to get the job done right? Do I get to do what I do best every day?
- Frequency of release is a team health diagnostic - good teams move fast and deliver small chunks of the big picture
- Good teams check in code frequently - lack of this suggests poor planning and chunking
- Good teams have a low frequency of incidents
- Poor teams are: fragile to the loss of the leader; resistent to outside ideas; build empires; inflexible
- Durable teams are: resilient to the loss of individuals; driven to find better ways; focussed on the company first; open to changes that serve their purpose
- Impatience, laziness and hubris are virtues of engineers according to Larry Wall
- Any time you see something inefficient, question it
- Develop and show the value of laziness
Ch06 - Managing managers
- The expectations for managing managers aren’t that different to those of managing multiple teams
- Things are now obscured through an additional level of abstraction
- You won’t detect problems when you’re in this role for the first time
- This is a place where you need to find your discomfort, chase it down and sit with it unblinking for a while
- Skip-level meetings - one of the critical success factors in managing managers
- A meeting with people who report to people who report to you
- Short 1:1 with each person in the organisation
- Skip-level lunches with the whole team
- Aim is to maintain trust and engagement, and detect places where you’re being “managed up” to
- A reality check from the people on the ground
- Relationships with your reporting managers should make your life easier
- Often hard to hold your managers accountable because accountability is muddled
- Common scenarios: unstable product roadmap; errant tech lead; ful-time firefighting
- Spend time with your managers to get to know them as people, and pay attention to their strengths and weaknesses
- The people pleaser: their team loves them as a person, but get frustrated
- The people pleaser: they’re more interested in a team that runs smoothly than pushing them
- The people pleaser: they wear their mood on their face
- The people pleaser: they never push back on work
- The people pleaser: they overpromise and underdeliver
- The people pleaser: they say yes to everyone
- The people pleaser: they know all about the problems, but never address them
- Help them feel safer saying no, and externalise more decisions
- Create better processes for getting work scheduled
- Show them that they’re exhibiting the behaviours and highlight the downsides
- Spend quality time with your new managers
- Use skip-level meetings to detect areas where you need to support them
- Watch for overwork, which is a sign they think they’re the taskmaster
- Beware poor relationships with other teams and product, which can be a sign of a control freak
- Managing experienced managers: make sure this person fits with the culture of your team
- Hiring managers: make sure they’ve got the skills, and they’re a culture match
- Have them role play a few 1:1s as part of the interview process
- They must be able to debug teams
- Try role-playing with someone who’s thinking of quitting