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Engineering Manager's Handbook

You're reading from  Engineering Manager's Handbook

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803235356
Pages 278 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Morgan Evans Morgan Evans
Profile icon Morgan Evans

Table of Contents (24) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: The Case for Engineering Management
2. Chapter 1: An Introduction to Engineering Management 3. Chapter 2: Engineering Leadership Styles 4. Chapter 3: Common Failure Modes for New Engineering Managers 5. Part 2: Engineering
6. Chapter 4: Leading Architecture 7. Chapter 5: Project Planning and Delivery 8. Chapter 6: Supporting Production Systems 9. Part 3: Managing
10. Chapter 7: Working Cross-Functionally 11. Chapter 8: Communicating with Authority 12. Chapter 9: Assessing and Improving Team Performance 13. Chapter 10: Fostering Accountability 14. Chapter 11: Managing Risk 15. Part 4: Transitioning
16. Chapter 12: Resilient Leadership 17. Chapter 13: Scaling Your Team 18. Chapter 14: Changing Priorities, Company Pivots, and Reorgs 19. Part 5: Long-Term Strategies
20. Chapter 15: Retaining Talent 21. Chapter 16: Team Design and More 22. Index 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Why do we need project planning?

If our goal as engineering managers is to deliver working software, not plans, we may question why we should bother with plans at all. Fundamentally, the purpose of planning is to reduce risk during project delivery. Without plans, we face significant risks of misalignment, miscommunication, and rework. Plans help us to avoid situations where team members have differing understandings of goals, constraints, and expectations. They help us to avoid wasted effort from misunderstanding what to deliver in what sequence.

Plans allow us to think through objectives beforehand in the hope of being prepared for delivery. Plans are useful when they preempt conflict, direct efforts in harmony, and align expectations. Plans are not useful when they waste valuable build time or provide a false sense of security, for example, by missing unknown unknowns.

Given the understanding that plans have useful features but are not foolproof, we can judge that they are...

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