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thoughtspile

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English learning game – built with AI

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Tiny JavaScript: a collection of libraries under 2 kB

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comments

thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
I think that's the optimal EM career path TBH. It's a shame many companies don't have an official middle-to- manager switch mechanism.
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
If you want to build a decent team, you really have to relax your grip on the tech part.

You don't fix every problem yourself, but have someone who can fix it available. Otherwise, people don't grow, and you can't take a vacation. You totally need a general (middle / senior level) understanding of technology, but having a separate person with strong technical chops is key.

> In which company does this happen, I wonder!

As a staff engineer on a design system for a top 50 website, roughly half my job was detailing a tech roadmap and identifying what can break across the codebase, something you can do perfectly well on grass.
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
But then again, c++ hft and payment processing aren't exactly low-stress jobs either
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
I even think this is sometimes in good faith, as in "this is some serious shot, better handle it myself to avoid failure".

My favorite pattern is what I call "code sheriff" lead, who does all code reviews himself to prevent bad code from reaching trunk. Then proceed to complain how you can't go on a vacation because all processes stop.
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
Good point on the control over your promotions, it's something I experienced when moving into an EM role. Banging my head until hitting an actual growth team.

I come from Russia, we're not exactly known for great people management, and I'd say management up to department head is expected to handle the tech part as well even in larger companies such as Yandex / VK. This fits your definition of normal companies perfectly.
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
Thanks for the feedback! I must say I've never worked in real big tech, and I've never worked with an IC beyond staff level. I'd imagine promotions to principal / fellow are quite rare as well? Besides, most "normal" companies don't have these grades, at all.

By transferable, I mean skills that are useful outside of our big tech bubble. You might not want to go out as money is very nice, but still good to know you can do something beside computer beep bop.
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
Man, people have a hard time talking to each other indeed. I might have to resort to some silly kindergarten games to make that happen
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
Not saying management is harder than engineering, at all. It's just another nice big area to learn something new.

Big companies tend to be quite prescriptive about role boundaries, so if you're an FE engineer, you can learn design and provide input as much as you want, but you won't likely get to design a new screen from scratch instead of your regular designer.

I mean, over the last few years as an IC I fiddled with CI setups and automated QA, wrote some CLI codegens, but after some time you really notice you start inventing problems to have some fun.
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
I've also seen horrible engineers whose code made entire teams miserable become amazing managers tho
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
Well, it's well known that to become a team lead you must eat the previous team lead)

To be fair, some managers over-optimize to protect against people undermining them, not sharing knowledge and responsibility and even actively removing top performers with leadership ambitions
thoughtspile
·2 lata temu·discuss
I haven't had any luck applying to leadership positions without prior experience. Your best bet is finding a fast-growing product: when the team triples, you'll need some new managers. I got to move around 2 months into my IC job, and now my team has grown to have another 3 leadership slots.