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Hello Reader, A few months ago, I spoke with an engineer who described a design review he could not stop thinking about. It was a standard meeting. A dozen people on the call, a couple of senior voices leading the conversation and a solution that already felt decided before anyone joined. Halfway through, he noticed a scaling issue that would only show up during edge cases. He thought about bringing it up then he looked at the room. A senior engineer had already said it looked good. The meeting was running fine and everyone wanted to move on to the next item on the agenda so he said nothing. When he told me the story, he said something that stuck with me: "I did not stay quiet because I did not care. I stayed quiet because I did not know how to disagree without making things worse." Most engineers have a version of this story.
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Hello Reader, A few years ago, I proposed adding automated rollback capabilities to our deployment pipeline. The system was fragile—on-call rotations were painful, incidents were frequent, and small changes could break the entire workflow. The refactor wouldn't ship new features, but it would make everything more reliable six months from now. The response was polite: "Sounds sensible. Not right now. Let's revisit next quarter." Next quarter came with new deadlines, new priorities and other...
Hello Reader, I spoke with an old friend last week. He told me he spent 4 years as a senior engineer watching less experienced engineers get to the next level ahead of him. His designs were cleaner. His solutions were faster. His technical reviews were thorough. But he kept getting the same feedback: "You need to be more visible and strategic" He thought that meant talking more in meetings. He was wrong. What he lacked was influence at work The Real Problem Here’s what actually happens when...
Hello Reader, Understanding this distinction would have saved me years of frustration in my engineering career. Every organization has two kinds of engineers. There are functional engineers and there are vital engineers. Most people never realize this, and it keeps them stuck far longer than necessary. I learned this the hard way, after confusing output with outcome for a long time. At first glance, functional engineers look impressive. They deliver tickets, close incidents, follow processes...