SWLW #446: A program to support Sustained Resilience, Why It’s Difficult to Build Teams in High Growth Orgs, and more.

A weekly newsletter by Oren Ellenbogen with the best content I found around people, culture and leadership in tech. You can also read this issue online and recommend this newsletter to your teammates for a great discussion.

Heya,

I hope that you and your family are doing well, and you are able to find a new rhythm in this hard situation.


As always, below you can read my best findings for the week -
 

This Week's Favorite


​​Why It’s Difficult to Build Teams in High Growth Organisations
5 minutes read.

Jason Yip shares his observations for scaling software teams during hyper growth (and what not to do). I liked his insight on group structure alignment with the stability of the group's strategy: "Structure should be stable where strategy is stable; structure should be flexible where strategy is volatile. For example, if a broader department-level product strategy is stable while more local tactics are volatile, you should want the structure and shared identity of the department to be stronger and more stable than team-level structures and identities."

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



Product [sponsored]


Guide to Effective Feature Management [O'Reilly]
Testing in production sounds scary, right? What if you could safely ship features faster? Adopt feature management practices to accelerate release cycles and deploy every 6 hours, instead of every 6 weeks. Check out the new book from O'Reilly and LaunchDarkly CTO & Cofounder John Kodumal.



 Promote your product on SWLW and reach over 27,550 leaders 

 


Culture


Me, When I Got My First Dollar Out of a Weekend Project
1 minute read.

My humble effort to help you start the weekend with a smile on your face, even in this difficult time.

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



Product Management in Infrastructure Engineering
5 minutes read.

"Most infrastructure teams have a lot of experience in Foundation, but have much less in Innovation, so I won’t belabor managing through scarcity, and will instead dive into how to manage in times of surplus engineering capacity." -- Will Larson covers how to approach roadmap planning and vision when it comes to internal infrastructure teams. It is never easy to get this right, as you often find yourself considering building a generic PaaS (although it's not your core business) versus stitching together a solution based on a few well-known tools.

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



Shifting Modes: Creating a Program to Support Sustained Resilience
9 minutes read.

"Incidents cannot be prevented because incidents are the inevitable result of success." -- Share this post with your team and talk about your current approach to failures. This one is extremely important to look for when reading the summary of the event and what the team learned from it and plans to do differently (including action items): "The organization doesn’t truly benefit until those lessons are scaled far and wide. For the write-ups to be useful, they have to teach the reader something new and help draw out the complexities of the incident."

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



The Return of the Office
5 minutes read.

I still don't have a strong opinion on where things will go, and how many companies will want to shift back to working from the office. It looks kind of obvious that forcing everyone to work from the office every day will block your ability to hire talent. It feels we need to utilize our time in the office to socialize and promote initiatives that require a lot of intense collaboration. Will we become better at time management, or at least more aware of how we invest our time given the setup we're in? Time will tell.

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



Jobs [sponsored]


Engineering Director @ Tessian (Remote / London)
We're building the world’s first Human Layer Security platform and we’re looking for an experienced technical Engineering Director to join our team.
 

 Looking to hire for your team? Promote your open positions on SWLW! 



Peopleware


An Incomplete List of Skills Senior Engineers Need, Beyond Coding
3 minutes read.

How do you feel about the topics covered by Camille Fournier? What would you like to work on and improve? Is there someone who can guide you on it? A handy list to look at and pick areas you'd like to work on to help you improve your impact.

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



Good Execution vs. Bad Execution (Thread)
4 minutes read.

So many wonderful examples by Julie Zhuo of measuring execution quality. These two are spot on "Bad execution: All decisions are rigorously considered and debated. Good execution: Expensive, hard-to-reverse decisions are rigorously debated. Cheap, easily-reversible decisions are made quickly. (Most decisions are the latter.)" and "Bad execution: The team, lost in Groundhog Day, continues to debate last month's decision because they don't agree with it. Good execution: Once a decision is made, everyone moves in lock step on implementation. Only substantial new information reopens the case."

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



Testing in the Twenties
8 minutes read.

As distributed systems and "big data" became more common, we see the spread of appreciation for tests, monitoring, and alerts. Tim Bray's post can serve as a great ground to discuss with your team. What is your preference? Why is that? What did you change your mind about in the past 5 or 10 years?

Read it later via Pocket or Instapaper.
Share it via Twitter or email.



And finally, inspiring tweets...


@david_perell: The Law of Work: Communicating an idea requires a finite amount of work. The more work the writer does to clarify their ideas, the less the reader has to work to understand them.

@rakyll: Operations is not a part of the job. It is the job. You don’t have a product if you can’t operate it.



p.s. if you're interested in joining SWLW's Slack channel, simply reply to this email and let me know.

If you're leading a team, consider writing your Manager README (it's free) or getting my e-book and interviews Leading Snowflakes: The New Engineering Manager's Handbook. You can also support me and my work by becoming a SWLW Patron. Thank you ❤️




Keep reading, keep learning.
-- Oren Ellenbogen.

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Older messages

SWLW #445: How Organizations are changing, Are Pull Requests holding back your team, and more.

Friday, June 4, 2021

Weekly articles & videos about people, culture and leadership: everything you need to design the org that makes the product. A weekly newsletter by Oren Ellenbogen with the best content I found

SWLW #444: Why your huge tech team isn’t delivering, Barrels & Ammunition and more.

Friday, May 28, 2021

Weekly articles & videos about people, culture and leadership: everything you need to design the org that makes the product. A weekly newsletter by Oren Ellenbogen with the best content I found

SWLW #443: Hiring vs Nurturing Managers, Optimizing Bugs Fix Policy, and more.

Friday, May 21, 2021

Weekly articles & videos about people, culture and leadership: everything you need to design the org that makes the product. A weekly newsletter by Oren Ellenbogen with the best content I found

SWLW #442: The great online game, Grow the puzzle around you, and more.

Friday, May 14, 2021

Weekly articles & videos about people, culture and leadership: everything you need to design the org that makes the product. A weekly newsletter by Oren Ellenbogen with the best content I found

SWLW #441: Decision Making vs Decision Understanding, Self-Organizing Engineering Teams, and more.

Friday, May 7, 2021

Weekly articles & videos about people, culture and leadership: everything you need to design the org that makes the product. A weekly newsletter by Oren Ellenbogen with the best content I found

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