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TECH PEOPLE LEADERSHIP NEWSLETTER

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Every week or so I collect a set of articles that have caught my eye about leadership and management in the tech industry.

 

The articles cover a wide range - everything from the basics of running meetings, to the subtleties of managing remote teams, to the underpinnings of giving feedback and difficult conversations.

 

Articles I circulate in the newsletter are collected below in the archive.  Feel free to browse, and free to sign up!

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THE ARCHIVE

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All
Communication
Culture
Creativity
Feedback
Diversity
Decisions
Growth
Hiring
Interruption
Leadership
Management
One on Ones
People
Power
Praise
Remote Teams
Software
Startup
Teams

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How Great Managers Give and Receive Feedback - Fellow.App

A clear and complete summary of the why and how of feedback from reading Kim Scott, Julie Zhou, Marcus Buckingham, and Camille Fournier. Easy read, informative. complete.

How to Deliver Constructive Feedback in Difficult Situations

A good introduction to the Non Violent Communication approach to tricky conversations. Good perspective. (A note: Medium have implemented a weirdo pay semi-wall. If you find this, or some other article, behind it, I apologize - I can’t figure out their system).

Why Feedback Is Never Worthwhile | Oliver Burkeman | Life and Style | the Guardian

The contrarian view of feedback continues: we can only have opinions about the effects of others, not their skills. Not sure what I think. Challenging. Good.

The Five Conditions for Improvement – Roy Rapoport – Medium

A cool, dispassionate account of the steps necessary to get somebody to correct a performance issue. Practical, clear.

The Feedback Paradox: Brutal Honesty, Radical Transparency, Radical Candor and Netflix

Reposting my notes on the Feedback Paradox: we a) know it’s necessary and b) find it very hard to do. And why some cultures force the issue with phrases like “brutal honesty” and “radical transparency”.

Understanding Speed and Velocity: Saying "NO" to the Non-Essential

“saying yes to everything is a quick road to mediocrity”. Yep. And it’s the slow road to complete overwhelm, particularly as the organization you are responsible for grows. Often made more difficult because saying yes and just taking on the results has been a super-power up to that point.

Open-Plan Office: Great for Photo Shoots, Terrible for Collaboration | Inside Nuclino

“In an open office, even if you don’t intend to slack off, the feeling of being constantly observed creates the pressure to always appear visibly busy. That means answering emails, scheduling and attending meetings, making sure to always weigh in on Slack and doing other superficial tasks – none of which help you get real work done”.


Yes. “Performative Busyness” - the scourge of the management role.

Frustrated at Work? That Might Just Lead to Your Next Breakthrough - The New York Times

Interesting post. A kind of mishmash of: the value of mavericks, the possibility that a frustrated team member may be chafing because they can’t do the brilliant thing they want to do, and the fact that humans are attracted more to difficult (sometimes very difficult) tasks than easy. A good read.

“Blast Radius”, “Crushing It” and “Wartime CEOS”: The Pros and Cons of Violent Metaphors

My Notes: I was introduced to a new term the other week: “blast radius”. It made me think about how much we use violent metaphors (“crushing it”, “wartime CEO”), why they work and what else they imply.

Ask HN: How to Speak like a Leader, Not like an Engineer? | Hacker News

Fascinating discussion about the difference in communication styles between technical and manager type people. This is non-theoretical, from people who are living it daily. Great stuff.


“If I go to a PM or manager with questions on a feature I’m supposed to develop I sure hope they have a strong opinion about what I’m supposed to be building! Opinionated is orthogonal to being persuasive though”

The Art of Winning An Argument

“At first, when people disagree with us we assume they are ignorant … that they lack information. So we try to convince them with information. If we show them that information and they still don’t change their mind we just think they’re idiots”


More on the difference between persuading (emotional) vs persuading (rational). Short, helpful.

Roleplaying Difficult Conversations | Lara Hogan

Roleplaying a conversation before you have it is the best way to prepare, hands down. Yes, it’s uncomfortable the first few times. So practice until the discomfort goes away.


“…it made me much less scared when I had the real conversation, because I had already practiced what it felt like to be punched in the face with these emotions”

The Stormtrooper Problem: Why Thought Diversity Makes Us Better

Some musing on why teams need “thought diversity” - because otherwise they don’t change and evolve. Too much homogeneity and the team stagnates. Relates to a post from last issue on why teams don’t work. Who breaks the rules on your team? Nobody? Might want to give it a little thought.

Talking Ourselves Into It: How We Rationalize Bad Choices | Darden Ideas to Action

Huh. Turns out we use a specific type of language when we’ve managed to convince ourselves that we should do something we know we shouldn’t. This piece breaks down how common it is to not do the right thing, and what we sound like when we’ve gone there.

Undiscussed Topics Are Smaller Than They Appear – the Startup – Medium

Yep. Hidden, Unsaid Things in a team are generally not a good idea. Marcus suggests how to get unstuck. Nice.

The Evils of Snark | Programmer's Paradox

A quick piece on snark: “If your team has a lot of snark, they are sending a message. They are struggling and need help”


(My personal view is that snark develops in direct proportion to the degree of bullshit a team is subjected to. So if there’s a lot of snark, look for, and reduce the bullshit!).

Stop creating Maximal Voluminous Products for your ‘MVPs’

Love the phrase “Maximal Voluminous Product”. Check the piece for reasons your stripped-down, foundational MVP keeps ballooning.

What Does Success Look Like as a Manager? | Programmer's Paradox

Nice! A simple, careful, thoughtful piece on what it means to manage well. A short, uplifting read.


“I’ve achieved success when the teams I manage hold themselves accountable”

When the Bully Is the Boss - The New York Times

Well waddya know? Somebody did the research and…


“We’d love to find out if there are good aspects of abusive leadership. There’s been a lot of research. We just can’t find any upside.”

Phillip Caudell on Twitter: "The CEO of @RevolutApp on Slack: “Why aren’t you working on weekends?” 🚮… "

A textbook case of how not to get the team in on the weekends. Shouldn’t really pick on RevolutApp - many people have done it (including myself, back in the day). Worth checking out so you can reflect on your own leadership - what works, what could be better?

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