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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

Right now there are 966 articles in the archive

My Expectations For Everyone Working For Me – Tech People Leadership – Medium

Great memo (an actual paper memo originally) from Norm Meyrowitz, the best leader of tech and product people I’ve ever worked with. Clear, generous, inspiring.

Startup Engineering: Managing, not Micromanaging – Mason Jones – Medium

Fairly long, but thoughtful post, with good ideas about how to move yourself away from micromanagement. And yes: “In the end, it all comes down to two-way trust”.

What Makes a Great Leader, Explained in Eight Counterintuitive Charts — Quartz at Work

Shane Snow puts together a series of “you need both of these conflicting points of view” charts for leadership. “willing to change” vs “willing to fight”; “personal support” vs “intellectual conflict” etc. The subtleties lie in which choice to make, and when.

10 Hard Truths About Management No One Tells You – ThinkGrowth.org

Excellent set of True Things that anybody who has managed for any length of time knows, but are very infrequently discussed. Keep it around for first time managers.

Average Manager vs. Great Manager – The Year of the Looking Glass – Medium

“Pretty good” management vs great management explained in ten sketches, by Julie Zhou. Probably the third time I’ve posted this. Print it out, stick it on a wall somewhere people who are managing for the first time can see it.

Echoes of a Downpour

Loved this. Managers are people. It’ll take two minutes to read. Check it out.

Ultimate List of 1:1 Questions for Managers - Google Sheets

One on ones are daunting if you haven’t done them before. And a first time manager needs to start doing them. This will help, a ton.

I Know My Manager Is Flailing And/Or Drowning When: – Rands in Repose

Rands with a typically pithy and helpful list, originally gleaned from twitter.

An Ode to the OKR - How to Motivate Greater Ambition in Teams • Tomasz Tunguz

The case for OKRs, in a short post. Explained, of course, by somebody who’s job is now VC.

You Suck at Okr's. Here's Why.

Provocative title. But he does put his finger on an issue with OKRs: like every other planning mechanism they are brittle, so need to be be well-defined but relatively loosely held. (Truth in advertising: the author is also selling his expertise).

Full Catastrophe Living (Revised Edition): Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain, and Illness - Jon Kabat-Zinn

New edition of the first books to “demystify” meditation and mindfulness, this is still a vital, practical classic. Yes it’s got a strange title, and, no, your life is probably not a catastrophe, but it’s got more wisdom per Kindle pixel than anything else you will read this summer.

Amazon.com: The Heart Aroused: Poetry and the Preservation of the Soul in Corporate America - David Whyte

A favorite of mine - a management book that avoids coming to any conclusions about how to actually manage, whilst looping around through Coleridge, Shakespeare and a few dozen others to illuminate how working in the corporate world is just part of the human condition.

Leadership Style Colors | Lara Hogan

A typically clear, creative and helpful post from Lara Hogan. How many leadership styles are there? Try her color coding. Or, with her encouragement, make up your own taxonomy. Good stuff.

The Power of Moments: How to Create Defining Moments in Business | Smartbrief

Liked this. “Moments” are powerful things - hey, we shipped! We hired that fantastic person! I got a raise! Perhaps you can deliberately create “moments” - defined as “a short experience that is both memorable and meaningful”. Interesting. Check it out.

3 Variables of Delegation - Three Star Leadership

Useful breakdown of how to delegate effectively. Easy read. Helpful.


“Too much writing about delegation ignores the realities. One reality is that delegation is not a single act, it’s a whole series of connected acts”

The Upsides to Delegating – Aspire-Cs

This seems mis-titled to me. Should be “You know you should delegate, but you don’t. Here are some possible reasons why”. Overwhelmed because you’re not delegating (you know who you are)? It’s short - give it a read.


“Yet if you were really honest with yourself, you might realize that this situation is really about CONTROL, FEAR, and an ASSUMPTION”

The Problem With Intrinsic Motivation | Smartbrief

“Pull” motivation - people are working because they are aligned with what they value - is more powerful than “Push” motivation - people are working because of deadlines, crises, carrots. So how do you find what is “pulling” people?


“Don’t perpetuate the myth that you need to drive productivity through pressure and constant motion” and “Helping someone discover their intrinsic motivation is a lifelong gift”

What happens after OKRs?

OKRs are great! But software gets built through iteration, which means the O-part (the Objectives) might change. Huh. How to square one with the other? Take a read.

The 5 Steps to Inspire Action Through Storytelling With Data

This is specifically about communicating an employee survey, but has a lot of great general advice for presenting a case. Data is dry, people are not.


“Data should play a supporting, not leading role in your story”

Kurt Vonnegut on the Shapes of Stories and Good News vs. Bad News – Brain Pickings

I’m sure I’ve posted this before, but it’s worth re-reading multiple times. An overview of Kurt Vonnegut’s “story shapes”. The typical business story is “man in a hole” (in my opinion, anyway). Once you see that, making killer presentations gets a lot easier. Use it!

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