TECH PEOPLE LEADERSHIP NEWSLETTER
A weekly newsletter of curated links giving help, advice and opinion to leaders in teh tech industry.
THE ARCHIVE
FEEDBACK
13 Questions to Get More Feedback From Your Team - Programming Leadership - Medium
Easy read, useful stuff. Exactly what it says - ways to start the “I want feedback” conversation with your team.
Disrupting Bias in Feedback — Jill Wetzler
A cool, practical post outlining specific ways to notice, and then disrupt our own biases when giving feedback. Great piece.
MEETINGS
Nice story about how looking at improving everything by small increments can make a massive difference over time. (Yeah, obvious, but it raised the question, at least for me, of “huh, OK, well what can I improve a little bit that I routinely overlook?”).
A good look at what really “hiring for fit” might mean. Strong article.
“When we hire for fit without thinking about what a fit means to us, we use an unfortunate proxy: similarity to hiring managers. The result: homogeneous teams, with poor results for employee experience and the bottom line”
My notes on breaking through stuck conversations. You’ve tried being clear and direct. You’ve tried repeating yourself. You are baffled by the responses and are about to start giving up, or getting loud and insistent. A “WTF moment”. A breakdown of what to do instead.
“We have inherited and unquestioningly perpetuated management practices that date back to the Industrial Revolution. Systems and processes, hierarchy and outdated structures impede our ability to transform our organisations to be future-ready”
Interestingly, I think this is still true in the tech industry, although to a much lessor extent than outlined here. But take a look.
Simple. Handy. Lines up with Jeff Bezos’ Type 1 and Type 2 decisions to a degree. Useful.
Followup to a link I posted a couple of weeks ago. Woman are confident, and express it, but don’t get heard.
This is wild! An in-depth report from Stripe on developer efficiency and its dollar effects on business (hint: large). An amazing document.
Questions like: “In your opinion, as a whole, how productive are developers at your company?” and “How much of a negative impact does each of the following have on your personal morale?” I’m going to spoil the answer: 1) overwork 81% and 2) changing priorities 79%.
A good set of questions to ask about your calendar (doesn’t apply just to CEOs, by the way). I would add: make the overall question you are asking be more pointed: “what do I really, really need to keep?”. Everything else should go.