Broadcom announced the general availability of VMware Tanzu Platform 10 that establishes a new layer of abstraction across Cloud Foundry infrastructure foundations to make it easier, faster, and less expensive to bring new applications, including GenAI applications, to production.
As a developer at Google in the early 2000s, I often felt out of place. My focus at the time was Javascript, which many Googlers didn't consider "real engineering." But by the time I left Google, web programming was mainstream and through my contributions to Gmail and the frontend infrastructure used by dozens of products, I'd achieved the level of Staff Engineer. More importantly, I finally considered myself a pretty good engineer.
I moved on to Medium as an individual contributor. I valued teamwork and leadership from all angles, but didn't have any official management experience. In fact, I wasn't particularly excited by the prospect of being a manager, always feeling more comfortable leading from behind than in front.
While I bristled at "manager culture" — with its command and control origins — I also felt that the "no manager" movement had created a toxic void that left employees feeling unsupported or jockeying for power. So, when the day came that I was asked to step up and take lead of the engineering team, I decided to pursue a different path, that of the servant leader.
Luckily Medium was well primed for this approach, with both Ev and Biz, who had seen hyper-growth at Blogger, Google, and Twitter — actively wanting to do things differently this time around.
I saw my role as an organizational problem solver; instead of telling individuals or teams what to do, I worked to put in place support structures for junior engineers, identified owners for infrastructure, refined our hiring process, and generally worked to clarify roles and responsibilities. The goal was to empower individuals and set teams up to work in ways that fit them best, while also streamlining processes to reduce stress and confusion.
As we grew the team and evolved our processes, I questioned the status quo and evaluated processes from first principles. Here are some of the things I learned along the way.
Build a 10x Team, Not 10x Individuals
Team performance is about so much more than just the sum of the individuals involved.
A high-performing team can truly be 10x, overachieving and reaching goals ahead of deadlines. At the same time, a team of disconnected but exceptional individuals can perform terribly, if the conditions for collaboration are not there. It's imperative that managers create a collaborative environment, or every team member — especially in this remote world — will feel like an island.
Rethink Performance Reviews
Traditional performance review processes do not do a good job of serving individuals' needs. They tend to be backward-looking performance assessment, as opposed to forward-looking feedback — feedforward — that re-establishes expectations for the future and lays out a path for how individuals can progress, both in terms of the work they do and how they fit into the team.
Furthermore, coupling feedback with assessment muddies the water — who is the audience? The manager or the individual? I found that decoupling career feedback from performance assessment provides a more meaningful experience for individuals which actually helps them grow much faster.
Establish Rituals and Routines
Humans are ritualistic creatures. Building a drumbeat or rhythm into your work processes makes everything easier. With a good cadence, everyone on the team knows what's happening and when. In chaotic environments, teams become disjointed and find it hard to settle into deep flow states where the work seems to flow effortlessly. Also, not knowing what's coming day to day adds a layer of anxiety and stress as team members prepare for the unknown.
Constantly Observe, Diagnose, and Evolve
Keeping dev teams effective is a constant process of observing and diagnosing. Structure and practices will never be stable for long, so you need to build and exercise a muscle for change. Reorganizations are traumatic and disruptive, so aim for continuous evolution instead of "ripping the band-aid off" every so often, which will waste time as teams settle back in and adjust to new work parameters.
Always Remind Team Members About the Big Picture
People need to be constantly reminded of the vision and how their work fits into the big picture. If not, even the simplest tasks can feel pointless. Even if you feel like you are repeating yourself and becoming boring, it's important to constantly work to keep everyone aligned and focused on the North Star. Without that guide, everyone builds their own rowboat versus constructing a stable ship.
Industry News
Tricentis announced the expansion of its test management and analytics platform, Tricentis qTest, with the launch of Tricentis qTest Copilot.
Redgate is introducing two new machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) powered capabilities in its test data management and database monitoring solutions.
Upbound announced significant advancements to its platform, targeting enterprises building self-service cloud environments for their developers and machine learning engineers.
Edera announced the availability of Am I Isolated, an open source container security benchmark that probes users runtime environments and tests for container isolation.
Progress announced 10 years of partnership with emt Distribution — a leading cybersecurity distributor in the Middle East and Africa.
Port announced $35 million in Series B funding, bringing its total funding to $58M to date.
Parasoft has made another step in strategically integrating AI and ML quality enhancements where development teams need them most, such as using natural language for troubleshooting or checking code in real time.
MuleSoft announced the general availability of full lifecycle AsyncAPI support, enabling organizations to power AI agents with real-time data through seamless integration with event-driven architectures (EDAs).
Numecent announced they have expanded their Microsoft collaboration with the launch of Cloudpager's new integration to App attach in Azure Virtual Desktop.
Progress announced the completion of the acquisition of ShareFile, a business unit of Cloud Software Group, providing a SaaS-native, AI-powered, document-centric collaboration platform, focusing on industry segments including business and professional services, financial services, industrial and healthcare.
Incredibuild announced the acquisition of Garden, a provider of DevOps pipeline acceleration solutions.
The Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) announced an expansion of its free course “Developing Secure Software” (LFD121).
Redgate announced that its core solutions are listed in Amazon Web Services (AWS) Marketplace.
LambdaTest introduced a suite of new features to its AI-powered Test Manager, designed to simplify and enhance the test management experience for software development and QA teams.