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

Summary

In this chapter, we introduced the purpose and goals of engineering managers. We learned about the broad responsibilities of engineering managers and the activities we perform in support of those responsibilities. Here’s a recap of these:

  • Maintaining teams capable of serving business needs
  • Producing mechanisms to make engineering teams self-sustaining and scalable
  • Owning the reputation and impact of their team
  • Performing activities and tasks related to engineering, managing, transitioning, and big-picture thinking

We learned how engineering managers spend their days and presented steps for you to plan your own days, summarized here:

  • Get a baseline of how to plan your day by surveying the expectations of your manager, peers, and engineering team.
  • Focus expectation surveys on understanding what others expect from you and not on making early commitments you may struggle to uphold.
  • Gain insight into the relative importance of work you might engage in by comparing the four activities of engineering managers with the notes from your expectation surveys.
  • Observe what your engineering team needs and what members do and don’t have time for to further determine how you can best contribute to the team’s success.
  • Avoid taking on hard technical challenges personally since they can absorb too much of your time and deprive your team of learning opportunities.
  • Be a translator. Your unique understanding of engineering and the business setting puts you in a position to provide invaluable context for your engineers and your leadership team.

Lastly, we learned how taking responsibility for the work of others can be a stressful adjustment. Your goal is to find a balance between providing guidance and alignment without dictating or controlling. Progress as an engineering manager will feel much slower than progress as an engineer. Engineering managers must persevere without much feedback at times.

In the next chapter, Chapter 2, we will learn how to approach our responsibilities and activities with a style that fits the setting. We will introduce some of the most common leadership styles and how they apply to different engineering team situations.