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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I’ve been thinking about “management” recently, trying to bottle it, simplify how we think about it. Julie Zhou gets the definition nicely clear in this (older) post.
“Management is the practice of constantly identifying what a team needs in order to be successful and then delivering on those needs”
Going out on a limb a bit with this one. Jack Kornfield is a world-renowned teacher of Vipassana Meditation (which we now called “Mindfulness”). He has been teaching and writing on the subject for close to fifty years (and still teaches at Spirit Rock, north of SF). This is a typically lucid and gentle post on the subject of anger, which has been on my mind recently. What is the purpose of anger? How can we channel it, work with it? Find a quiet room and give it five minutes.
I am late coming to Jeff Bezos’ letters to shareholders, but now a huge fan. This one introduces the idea of “Type 1” (large, irreversible) and “Type 2” (smaller, lower stakes) decisions. And also contains some clear thinking on culture:
“A word about corporate cultures: for better or for worse, they are enduring, stable, hard to change. They can be a source of advantage or disadvantage. You can write down your corporate culture, but when you do so, you’re discovering it, uncovering it – not creating it. It is created slowly over time by the people and by events –by the stories of past success and failure that become a deep part of the company lore”
If you are selling snow shovels, and there’s a big storm, is it a good idea to raise the price? This kind of decision shows up a lot: should we bug our site visitors with signup screens? Should we cut off that really, really useful feature to force subscriptions? Worth reading.
Nice to see this addressed: the difference between strategy and vision (I would add a third category - stories). Helpful.
“If strategies describe the harsh tradeoffs necessary to overcome a particular challenge, then visions describe a future where those tradeoffs are no longer mutually exclusive”
Loved this: “Well, first off, I am not sure that we even need a practical answer to that question, it is the “right thing to do”: we live in a pluralistic society where opportunity has been and continues to be unevenly distributed and it is simply the right thing to do as human beings to make sure our fellows have equal access to opportunities across our society”
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.
I enjoyed this. Finding your “voice” as a leader - the unique express of who you are at work - is a necessary step. Deb Liu (a VP at Facebook) describes why and how she went about it.
“For me, the hardest part of finding my voice was worrying that I had nothing to say that was worth listening to… over time I found that sharing more of myself was not a weakness but an opportunity to connect”
This is great. A list of phrases that should raise a red flag when you are intent on creating an inclusive workplace. “I’m sure he didn’t mean to offend anyone”. And “I don’t think she would be a culture fit”. Make you wince a bit? Might be some stuff to look at there.