Developing Engineering Leaders Is Done Differently
Go faster. Do it better. Do more with less. Meet the growth objective. All good ideas, but how? In two words: Engineering Leadership.
Going forward, competition will be fiercer. Engineering organizations will be asked to do better engineering work, even though they did that on the previous project. And to do that, engineering leaders will have to up their game. They will have to improve the engineers’ performance on the job and their own performance.
I think engineering leadership development is a singular challenge for companies that want to thrive and grow. And for mature companies, I think it will become more difficult as these companies reduce headcount. The burden on engineering leaders will grow as there are fewer leaders, more projects to complete, more work to elevate, and each leader will have more direct reports. It’s already difficult for engineering leaders to make time to grow engineers and to do it without guidance and support, but I think it will become more difficult.
And developing engineering leaders is difficult for younger companies that want to grow. These companies have engineering leaders with less experience and are new to the company and the industry. The organizational design is still forming and fluid, the work processes are still under development, and there are far more projects to deliver. Engineering leaders must create the organizational structure, identify engineering talent to develop, fill organizational holes, and increase design productivity to meet the company’s growth targets. These are big challenges for new-to-role engineering leaders who must get it done without mentorship and guidance.
Often, companies try to use standard leadership development programs to grow engineering leaders, but in my experience, these generic leadership programs don’t cut it. Every aspect of engineering leadership work has a technical bias that shapes the work, the processes, and the approaches. Generic leadership development programs are not built on a technical backplane and don’t provide the specialized guidance and support for the work.
Engineering leadership development is different.
Engineering leadership development comes with unique challenges. And to further complicate things, those challenges differ between mature companies and younger companies.
Your products and technologies are different.
Your processes are different.
Your business models are different.
And your engineering leadership development program should be different.
Image credit — Bennilover
Mike Shipulski