The Ask

(randsinrepose.com)

17 points | by digitallogic 2 days ago

4 comments

  • danjl 29 minutes ago
    Harsh take: AI should replace most middle management. It is the easiest part of an organization to replace. The people making things should mostly communicate about company strategy, cross-team issues, and job requirements with an AI. There should be a handful of high-level strategy on top of the AI. The AI should have access to all the documents for the company. The middle management should be put in a spaceship along with HR and sent off to another planet so the people who build things can just get stuff done. This will never happen.
    • cweagans 7 minutes ago
      I have a theory. How close does the following describe you?

      * You're an engineer with 3-6 years of experience in a primarily IC role

      * Maybe you've done some tech lead stuff, but you've never actively worked in engineering management.

      * You feel that management (and HR for some reason?) is constantly in the way of you getting stuff done, and that your life would be easier if you could simply decline every meeting and only communicate through pull requests.

      Humor me, please. I'll explain after.

      • danjl 1 minute ago
        I have 40+ years experience as a manager and engineer at large enterprise tech companies (what the kids now call FAANG, though some of the company names were different back then), and was a Founder, CEO and CTO at a $7M VC funded company and several other "differently-funded" startups.
      • LPisGood 2 minutes ago
        For the sake of moving this along, that describes me perfectly. Please, continue.
      • qsxfthnkp2322 1 minute ago
        It’s a trap.
  • 1123581321 51 minutes ago
    I liked this, although it seemed like there were unusual typos/missing words for Rands in a couple of places. Is this a book draft?

    It's a good exercise to mentally go around the a meeting room and think about what each person wants from it. Given Rands' job, he obviously starts thinking about it earlier, and for longer, but even a few minutes while everyone's settling in and chit-chatting can make a difference in how you participate.

  • JSR_FDED 1 hour ago
    This is either very profound or not at all. Can’t figure out which.
    • jaggederest 1 hour ago
      I think much of this kind of management faffery might be like advertising - I know half is useless, but I'll be damned if I can figure out which half.
  • subygan 1 hour ago
    I hate middle management as much as the next guy.

    but in this case, specifically. who are these career people thinking about orgs and their movement in years?

    especially in a job economy where employees are expected to be laid off despite "staggering profits". It feels completely orthogonal to the environment I exist in.

    is there room for lifers in big orgs? without getting the boot or worrying about the boot?