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Scaling Software Teams

  • Achieving Gender Parity with Active Allyship with Denise Yu

    2 JUN 2020 · Denise is a Senior Engineer at GitHub, a prolific speaker, as well as an author and illustrator. In this episode, we dive deep into the role that gender plays in inclusion. What solutions can narrow the gap between men and women on engineering teams? Listen in as Wes and Denise break it down. Wes’ Takeaways: Gendered language matters We have a responsibility as allies to speak out Documentation and the Double Rooney Rule can help us narrow gendered gaps Don’t correct people publicly on inclusion things
    45m 28s
  • Being Black in Tech with Kevin Stewart

    26 MAY 2020 · Kevin Stewart is an engineering leader who has worked across multiple company stages such as Fastly, Heptio, Nodesource, and Adobe. Today, he is the VP of Engineering at Harvest. In this episode, we talk about the invisible burden that code-switching puts on underrepresented groups. How can we build D&I initiatives that actually lead to more diverse hiring and greater inclusion on our teams? Listen is as Kevin and Wes discuss. Wes’ Takeaways: Our metrics may undermine our D&I efforts. Code-switching places an invisible burden on under-represented folks. If we’re in a position of privilege, we need to champion underrepresented groups instead of tokenizing them. Make sure people like public praise… Also, praise their work instead of their identity.
    57m 16s
  • Firing and Getting Fired with Zach Holman

    19 MAY 2020 · Zach Holman was employee number 9 at Github. He was one of their earliest engineers, and he saw the team expand to over 250 employees. Years later, he was fired from his role and has since gone on to start his own companies and advise other startups. In this episode, we talk about a really hard subject… firing and getting fired. We also cover why your onboarding process may be to blame if you have high turnover and the next steps you should take after someone is let go. Wes’ Takeaways: Fire humanely: Give warning, offer PIP, and understand/think deeply about human impact Don’t let this be the end of your relationship. “Once you’re out, you’re out” is lame. Onboarding is highly correlated with firing… If you’re seeing high turnover, it’s likely an onboarding problem. Your goal should be: How do we make a company that most of the people who work here are happy and successful? If things end well, ex-employees can be referral sources and advocates
    30m 37s
  • Developing Leaders on a Team with Jill Wetzler

    12 MAY 2020 · How do you lead the leaders on your team? Today’s guest has been developing leaders for years, and she’s sharing her insights on this episode of Scaling Software Teams. Jill Wetzler is the Head of Engineering at Pilot. Before her current role, she scaled Lyft’s Infrastructure Engineering organization from a handful of people to over 100 infra engineers. She was also Lyft’s Director of Engineering Leadership Development. In this episode, we talk about the principles and tactics she’s used to develop leaders; from skip-level one-on-ones to developer advocacy. We also dive into the management issues that can hold under-represented individual contributors back and what we can do to fix them. Wes’ Takeaways: Skip-level one-on-ones can be incredibly useful for finding coaching areas for managers Hire managers who think about management the same way you do–Stay in front of management hiring. Use a charter to align teams on tasks, priorities, and customer needs. Developer advocacy is critical for a developing team. (What engineers wish HR would be) If under-represented groups are stuck, it’s likely a management issue.
    48m 39s
  • One-on-Ones with Jason Evanish

    5 MAY 2020 · How do you know if your one-on-ones are effective? In this episode, we’re diving deep into one-on-ones with our guest, Jason Evanish. Jason Evanish is the founder and CEO of GetLighthouse, a company that’s focused on helping develop great leaders by enabling better one-on-ones. Jason is passionate about helping teams build strong relationships, and it starts with building trust through one-on-ones. What are the three elements of a successful one-on-one? Listen in as Jason breaks it down. Wes’ Takeaways: 1. The top 10% of managers have regular, well-executed, one-on-ones. 2. One-on-ones are for building trust, not giving status updates. 3. Remote 1:1s are different, and that’s okay. 4. Make sure you’re using this time for clear expectation setting.
    40m 20s
  • Cultivating a Highly Performant Remote Engineering Team with Jeremy Wight

    28 APR 2020 · These are challenging times, especially for engineering leaders. How do you “engineer” the trust in a distributed team that would occur normally in a localized workforce? Today’s guest is here to show you how. Jeremy Wight is the VP of Product and Engineering at Base. Base raised $2.6M in 2019 to build the first software platform that’s exclusively for Executive Assistants. Jeremy has been building a remote team for the past two years, and he’s collected some amazing insights about building a fully distributed engineering team. In this episode, we talk about the best-practices he’s used to keep his remote team rowing in the same direction and shipping product that matters. Listen in to hear the full conversation. Wes’ Takeaways: 1. High-functioning remote teams focus on moving KPIs instead of shipping features. 2. Little “p” product ownership breeds more autonomous remote workers. 3. Serendipity breeds trust, but serendipity is hard on remote teams. 4. How you win is putting the fire out in 30 seconds or less. 5. If we aren't building the right things, it doesn't matter how much we work.
    26m 53s
  • Becoming A Resilient Manager with Lara Hogan

    21 APR 2020 · A resilient manager is the foundation of every successful team. How do you become a more resilient manager? Today’s guest is here to show you how. Lara Hogan is the co-founder of Wherewithall, the former VP of Engineering at Kickstarter, and the former Engineering Director at Etsy. She’s also the author of two books: Resilient Management and Demystifying Public Speaking. In this episode, Lara does what she does best: management coaching. She provides Wes with some 1:1 coaching on his management style and uses the BICEPs framework to help him better understand resistance patterns he may see in his daily work. Listen in to hear the full conversation. Wes’ Takeaways: 1. Take a 5-minute walk around the block. 2. Do a 2-minute breathing exercise. 3. Open my TODO list. 4. Open the #candidate-quotes slack channel and read happy feedback from our customer's candidates. 5. Open the #gratitude slack channel and write a short message about something I'm thankful for.
    39m 3s
  • Wes Winham | Scaling Software: What to Expect in Season 2

    14 APR 2020 · Scaling Software Teams is back for Season 2! Last season we heard stories of triumph and failure from startup and scale-up leaders around the world. For Season 2, we want to do something different – we want to give you an engineering leadership survival guide so you can thrive in the midst of challenging times. This season, we’ll equip you with resources from incredible engineering leaders at companies like Kickstarter, BASE, Pilot, and GitHub. Listen in as they share expert advice on everything from running the perfect one-on-one to aligning your fully-distributed team. Subscribe so you don’t miss an episode.
    5m 40s
  • Starting Up Your Second Office, With Brian Delahunty

    19 DEC 2019 · Brian Delahunty is the Head of Reliability at Stripe, and was the Site Lead who helped them open and hire for their Seattle office. Throughout this process, he talked to leaders at over a dozen companies who led an HQ2 effort, and learned what worked and what didn’t. Today, he’s sharing those lessons with us. In this episode, we talk about how he used recruiting as a partner to grow the Seattle office, why Stripe Seattle’s culture is different than Stripe San Francisco, and how managing chronic pain helps him empathize as a manager.
    52m 25s
  • Running Remote, with Liam Martin

    3 DEC 2019 · Liam Martin is the CoFounder of staff.com and timedoctor.com. Combined, they have 40+ employees in 9 different countries and specialize in remote long term employee management. Liam also runs the Running Remote conference, which is the world’s largest remote conference specifically designed for building remote teams. In this episode, we talk about how to transition from a co-located development team to a remote team, and what to look for in your first remote hire.
    40m 33s

Scaling Software Teams is a weekly podcast to help software leaders navigate fast growth without losing the magic that made that growth possible. Every week, we bring you stories of...

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Scaling Software Teams is a weekly podcast to help software leaders navigate fast growth without losing the magic that made that growth possible. Every week, we bring you stories of trials, tribulations, and keys to success from high-growth engineering leaders all around the world.
We will learn together about how to scale a world-class engineering organization through hard-won stories about hiring developers, structuring teams, scaling collaboration, and managing managers.
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