Communicate Impact
I was reading an article summarizing the important work someone had done during his tenure as a leader. I was struck by how poorly the article communicated impact. Learn to communicate impact as a technical leader.
Read MoreI was reading an article summarizing the important work someone had done during his tenure as a leader. I was struck by how poorly the article communicated impact. Learn to communicate impact as a technical leader.
Read MoreThe recent stories of people helping one another during hurricane Harvey are moving examples of helping one another. Even just a cot to sleep in a dry emergency center can make a big difference. We aren’t limited to helping during times of crisis. When you offer to help someone else you can strengthen your relationship and reap the personal satisfaction of giving.
Read MoreI noticed a difference in Japan with how folks performed in their jobs. Especially the most mundane jobs. It seemed to me that most people took their job seriously, and performed it to the best of their ability. Even in cases where the job they had wasn’t the most glamorous. I observed workers investing themselves fully in their work. You can use this tactic to stand out regardless of your job.
Read MoreOne of the experiences I have when I’m traveling is an enhanced focus on being present. I can often be preoccupied with what comes next. There have been times when I am overly attached to following the plan. During my recent trip to Japan, I found myself better focusing on the present and letting go of my plan.
Read MoreI recently got to take a trip to Japan for two weeks, and there was a stark difference between the Japanese culture I experienced and what I am used to every day in the US. The experience got me to thinking about what makes up culture. Are you setting your culture effectively?
Read MoreMore often than you think, you are making decisions about accepting work in your job. Have you ever asked yourself if the new job or new work you are about to accept will be fun? If your work is fun, and the people you work with are fun, it can make a lot of things about the job better.
Read MoreAs a technical leader you are more likely to not have clear direction on your priorities and tasks. You are in a role where you give direction and priorities. As an executive, reporting to other executives, the detailed kind of priorities and instruction you got in more junior roles fall away. It is important not to slow-down in the face of the increased uncertainty.
Read MoreIn any technical leadership role, you are only temporary. That concept helps frame the importance of spending time on only those most important things. Only things you can do. When you delegate some of your work to others on your team, you develop their capability to carry on without you (and establish a powerful relationship as a leader).
Read MoreAs technical leaders, our job is very often to convince others of something. As you consider these goals, it is important to evaluate your actions through the lens of those you want to convince. What you would want to hear is often different than what will be convincing for others.
Read MoreWhen we think of prioritization or focus, we often think of making a list. Perhaps prioritizing that list and asking ourselves what we tasks we want to be sure we do. When was the last time you asked what you should stop doing?
Read MoreSignal to noise: a measure of how much useful information there is in a system, such as the Internet, as a proportion of the entire contents. The tactic of narrowing down your focus, and eliminating the noise, will fundamentally increase the signal on your productivity.
Read MoreDo you ever feel like work owns you, whether because they give you a large salary or good benefits? Have you had a job where you didn't feel that work had a claim on your entire world? How can you get the balance of not feeling owned, regardless of the responsibility, salary or benefits.
Read MoreI have found effective prioritization as a key to success as my world has become more and more complicated. As you become more senior in you organization, it will be incumbent on you to choose where you spend time. I have found a simple bullseye as an effective tool for prioritization.
Read MoreWhether in individual conversations or larger meetings, there is value in leaving space for the unknown. Leave time for questions and observations that will surprise you.
Read MoreOften I hear software engineers looking to move up in their organization and setting their sites on a technical architect role. Make no mistake, an architect is a leadership position that can be harder to achieve results than a project manager or development director. Here are some useful tactics to employ.
Read MoreOverhead is almost a dirty word. Nobody wants to be overhead. People want to be spending time on the “real work” rather than the overhead. Overhead is necessary in organizations. The overhead required in a small organization is much different than in a large one.
Read MoreDo not wait around for someone else to develop your career. Take control, help yourself and others. Here are some simple tactics to be your own career coach.
Read MoreHate meetings? Love them? Don't decry all meetings as a waste of time. How do you use meetings as an element of your communication strategy?
Read MoreI sometimes lose sight of whether or not I’m delivering the results I expect. I find value when I take time to reflect on the results I deliver and take stock of my performance. Here is how I hold myself accountable to make progress against my goals.
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