TECH PEOPLE LEADERSHIP NEWSLETTER

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

Right now there are 966 articles in the archive
Nice little article pondering why execs don’t listen well (and let’s just postulate, for the moment, that this is true, shall we?). Well, not clear that really listening is a skill we look for in senior managers. What do you look for in future (or current) execs?
Good long look at why asking questions and really listening for the answers leads to productive conversations.
Schein has diagnosed two things he believes are missing from most conversations: “Curiosity, and a willingness to ask questions to which we don’t already know the answer,” he writes.
Taking feedback well is hard (I went into the reasons here a few weeks back - humans are deeply social animals and take potential rejection as an almost physical threat).
Some nice practical tips and thoughts in this post. Quick read, and helpful.
My post on the delicate business of adding a VP Engineering to a startup. I’ve been on both ends of this, and coached multiple clients (founders and VPEs) through the transition. It’s a big change, and needs subtlety and caring on all sides. Take a look.
Nice! Hard to find whimsical writing about management, let alone whimsical writing about management that makes useful points. Short, fun.
“ Your team can achieve far more than you can. As a group they’re stronger, smarter, and can see more than you can. When your team smashes a problem into bits, it’s not literally you that did it, but you can get the deep satisfaction of smashing problems that are bigger and scarier than you could ever smash yourself”
Interesting comments about intuition by the author of Thinking Fast and Slow. Includes three conditions that need to be met in order to be able to trust an intuitive conclusion, which is helpful. The discussion on Hacker News is cool, as well.
Sunday (the day this newsletter goes out) is the fiftieth anniversary of “The Mother of All Demos” by Doug Englebart, which showed text editing, a mouse as a pointing device, linked documents, video conferencing, describes a global network. We’re only now just starting to move past the future as it was sketched out in this demo.
If you haven’t watched it, take the time and watch the future from fifty years ago.