Book Image

Engineering Manager's Handbook

By : Morgan Evans
Book Image

Engineering Manager's Handbook

By: Morgan Evans

Overview of this book

Delightful and customer-centric digital products have become an expectation in the world of business. Engineering managers are uniquely positioned to impact the success of these products and the software systems that power them. Skillful managers guide their teams and companies to develop functional and maintainable systems. This book helps you find your footing as an engineering manager, develop your leadership style, balance your time between engineering and managing, build successful engineering teams in different settings, and work within constraints without sacrificing technical standards or team empathy. You’ll learn practical techniques for establishing trust, developing beneficial habits, and creating a cohesive and high-performing engineering team. You’ll discover effective strategies to guide and contribute to your team’s efforts, facilitating productivity and collaboration. By the end of this book, you’ll have the tools and knowledge necessary to thrive as an engineering manager. Whether you’re just starting out in your role or seeking to enhance your leadership capabilities, this handbook will empower you to make a lasting impact and drive success in your organization.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1: The Case for Engineering Management
5
Part 2: Engineering
9
Part 3: Managing
15
Part 4: Transitioning
19
Part 5: Long-Term Strategies

How do you manage risks?

Managing risk is a continuous process. Once you develop an awareness of risk, it is something that you will manage every day. Since risks can be so impactful to businesses and teams, it is good to take a rigorous approach to managing them. Take control of risks by identifying them, prioritizing, communicating, and responding.

Identifying risks

Identifying risks, or risk recognition, is the most important step of risk management. Even if you were to stop here, the act of recognizing a threat removes the surprise from it and allows you to have it in mind as you go about your work.

Risks that you identify may not always make sense to further manage. Some risks, such as natural disasters or global events, you may take note of as threats but are not necessarily worth specific mitigation. At this stage, you focus on recognizing and cataloging only, starting with common risks in software engineering.

Examples of common risks

In Chapter 5, we learned...