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This post is part of a short series about my experience in the VP of Engineering role at Honeycomb. In February of 2020, I was promoted from Director of Engineering to Honeycomb’s first VP of Engineering. Happily, all these things turned out to be true and are still true to this day.
As engineeringmanagers and leaders, our job of course is to help our teams deliver value to the organization and its customers. Yet from a higher level, our role is to ensure that both engineers and teams continue to grow and develop. So what exactly does career growth mean, and how can managers and leaders invest in it?
This is a talk about what you do, as VP of Engineering, when somebody asks for the impossible. And, as a fully remote company, we have a lot of flexibility in where we hire. We have a bunch of engineers who dont have the XP mindset. Our engineeringmanagers are at the forefront of that effort.
The other thing I noticed actually about engineers, and engineeringmanagement as a discipline is engineers and engineeringmanagers think that somehow they’re unique in these management responsibilities. Marcus: Why did you feel this was the right time for this book? We are not special.
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