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
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One of the simplest and most effective interaction tools you can learn is to just stop. And take a breath. God knows how many better decisions, stronger relationships and successful teams would exist if we all knew this from day one. A good reminder - take a look.
Great post from Rands about a) why feedback is important, and b) how to get into the difficult business of getting it and giving it. This is a terrific quote:
“You are missing critical data when all you consult is yourself. It’s not that your inner dialog has a devious plan to prevent you from learning, it’s that it’s operating with an incomplete and biased set of data. The humans around, watching you act, have both the context and the experience to tell you important observations about both your successes and failures”
A clearly described, and fascinating, look at why AI can easily codify and re-enforce our existing biases (both good and bad):
“Fairness is, by nature, aspirational: it’s forward-looking. We want to be fair; we rarely look at the past and take pride in how fair we were. Data is always retrospective; you can’t collect data from the future”
The issue of trust comes up very frequently in coaching. This piece breaks down why it feels so dangerous to bring up (hint: it is), and a model and methodology I use with my clients to make the conversation more skillful, nuanced and workable.
A longer description of “Bikeshedding”: “The time spent on any item of the agenda will be in inverse proportion to the sum [of money] involved.”
Including it here because it’s a reminder that we all tend to solve the problems we can solve, and try and ignore, diminish and otherwise try and hide from the ones we think we can’t.
Ed’s great explanation of a simple trust model (there are more complicated ones). The issue of trust comes up a lot in coaching as organizations grow, as founders and early managers can no longer hold on to every detail. If you’re wrestling with it, this will help.