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Managing people is difficult wherever you work. But in the tech industry, where management is also a technical discipline, the learning curve can be brutal--especially when there are few tools, texts, and frameworks to help you. In this practical guide, author Camille Fournier (tech lead turned CTO) takes you through each stage in the journey from engineer to technical manager. From mentoring interns to working with senior staff, you'll get actionable advice for approaching various obstacles in your path. This book is ideal whether you're a new manager, a mentor, or a more experienced leader looking for fresh advice. Pick up this book and learn how to become a better manager and leader in your organization. Begin by exploring what you expect from a manager Understand what it takes to be a good mentor, and a good tech lead Learn how to manage individual members while remaining focused on the entire team Understand how to manage yourself and avoid common pitfalls that challenge many leaders Manage multiple teams and learn how to manage managers Learn how to build and bootstrap a unifying culture in teams Review: Great book to know ground details - This is one of those book which took a lot of time for me to complete, and the reason was the level of detailing it has, I call that meat in it. It surely gives a great insight on all the engineering levels with really nice examples. I would surely recommend this book to engineering leaders. Review: Must read for software engineering lead and managers - This is not IT project management book, this is purely for software engineering managers. I have completed first 4 chapters so far and can see how much thoughts have gone into writing. Author offers practical advise on career progression from software engineer to tech lead, manager and CTO. A recommended read for IT professionals.










| Best Sellers Rank | #302,767 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #8 in Software Architecture #66 in Engineering & Technology (Books) #760 in Analysis & Strategy |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 3,250 Reviews |
A**B
Great book to know ground details
This is one of those book which took a lot of time for me to complete, and the reason was the level of detailing it has, I call that meat in it. It surely gives a great insight on all the engineering levels with really nice examples. I would surely recommend this book to engineering leaders.
N**N
Must read for software engineering lead and managers
This is not IT project management book, this is purely for software engineering managers. I have completed first 4 chapters so far and can see how much thoughts have gone into writing. Author offers practical advise on career progression from software engineer to tech lead, manager and CTO. A recommended read for IT professionals.
V**C
Good product
Good reading book.
B**Y
Well, this book tells you lots of "Black and White" stuff about transioning to Management role
Go ahead, and get yourself a copy of it. Entertaining stuff ...importantly take the essence out of the book....not necessary you need to follow everything stated there.
P**R
Best Book. Changed my thinking
Love this book.
S**L
Bad paper quality
Paper quality is very bad Ink is missing in many pages
A**R
Poor quality print
The print is almost like a photo copy print, with many letters being hazed out
C**Y
Not New Condition and Bad Packaging
A**D
Fantastic - and not just for managers
This is an incredible book, and I would highly recommend it for anyone who is at all interested in technical leadership at any level. It focuses very specifically on the challenges of combining technical focus with leadership and/ or management, and steps through roles from hands-on development, through mentoring, tech lead and various levels of engineering manager all the way up to CTO. Along the way, it gives a realistic and well-thought-out sense of what these roles are (and are not), how they differ from lower roles and from subtly different roles at a similar level, and how to succeed at them. The most interesting thing I took from it though was that the understanding you can gain about the hierarchy of technical leadership roles is useful at all levels, including what we would call "individual contributor" roles (i.e. doing technical work with no direct reports). Engineers at a relatively early stage in their careers can benefit from the first few chapters, which cover what to expect from your own manager, how to start mentoring and how to consider whether long-term you are more interested in management or technical tracks. Equally, having done some low-level management over the last couple of years and now seeking to return to more of a senior technical/ architecture role, I still found the later chapters (about senior tech management roles) fascinating, because I know that even if I never take on those exact roles, understanding the responsibilities and thought processes of those who have them will make me much more effective in working with them and advancing my own ideas.
M**L
Highly recommemded
it is highly recommended for not only who wants to be a manager, entry level engineer also should read the book too to conduct with his manager. And if you are japanese read this book and stop idiotic procedure in your company!!!
Y**G
Real practical advice you can use to become better at your job
I am an experienced technology executive and consultant for engineering managers and execs. Based on my experience, this book is now the best book you can buy to learn modern engineering management. Previous contenders have included Peopleware, High-Output Management, The Mythical Man-Month, Good To Great, and others you've probably heard of. They are fine books, but they are either somewhat out of date, overly general, or a combination of both. This book is different. Fournier's book is a comprehensive overview of all the roles on the career path of modern technical management (starting from "senior engineer mentoring an intern" all the way up to CTO) and how to deal with the challenges at every step of the way. What sets this book apart, other than being comprehensive, is that it is the product of direct and highly relevant experience. Fournier has worked at huge companies, small startups, and medium-sized companies, all in hyper-competitive industry settings. You've probably read other management books and it always goes like this: they give you a piece of general advice about how to deal with an issue. You try it (assuming it is even specific enough to put into action and isn't just a feel-good HR platitude), you run into a snag, and now the advice is useless because the rosy assurances in the book about how employees were going to act reasonably didn't really work. You throw the book away and think there is something wrong with you because everyone keeps on talking about how the book is great and it's just your fault that you couldn't make this great advice work. Fournier's advice is not like that. She starts with the general outlines of the strategy, but then tells you about times when she had to confront the issue herself, how she tried to apply the strategy and screwed up (there are instances in the book where she openly admits "The first time I tried this I fell flat on my face"), what kinds of problems kept the strategy from working, how she modified the strategy and overcame the problems, and finally and most importantly, wraps up with a summary about how context and trade-offs affect how you apply the advice. Acknowledging and explaining how common variations and implementation details determine how a general strategy will play out is what makes this book unusually useful and relevant. Because everyone's job and situation are a little bit different, Fournier does an excellent job of breaking down broad strategies into their core principles, while separating out which details you can change based on individual situations, so that you can choose between trade-offs when you apply the strategy to the specific challenge you are confronting. Lastly, this book will give you confidence. Confidence that you're not alone, that others have faced the same problems and surmounted them, that you can do it too. Confidence that you can screw something up but still pick up the pieces and try again, that you'll still get it right the second or third time, and that you are going to get to where you want to go. This book is the product of years of tough lessons and hard-won success. Buy it. You won't regret it.
M**S
Prompt
Delivered amazingly fast, a few chapters in impression is that it's an awesome read and provides lots of insights into the Manager's path.
M**A
Excelente livro, recomendo
Fui recentemente promovida a Tech Lead e foi-me recomendado este livro. Tenho a dizer que tem sido bastante útil a sua leitura para me ajudar a adaptar melhor a este cargo. Gostava de ter lido isto antes, por isso mesmo que ainda não sejam Tech Leads, vale a pena lerem.
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