Shopify Implemented a Calendar Purge 4 minutes read.
Seeing a company as big as Shopify (thousands of employees) doing a "calendar purge" and defining new rules for meetings is incredible. Meetings are not bad, and there are plenty of tips on how to get them right, but starting fresh is a great way to rethink their quality and value, so you can recreate only those you need.
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Measuring an Engineering Organization 12 minutes read.
Will Larson shares his view on what (and why) to measure engineering organizations. These are some insights from my experience: You will always feel you can do more. High visibility SLAs are critical to measure and report on, but should get "boring" (we always meet them). If you're not there yet, that's okay. Show progress until you can keep it. Good SLAs are forever. Interesting KPIs should be temporary, and "mature" if they're really good (many KPIs are not) into SLA that you keep forever. Share SLAs as they usually cover the business needs, and then aim for what makes the company unique (not "basic needs" which SLA covers) and what you're doing about it. It should feel somewhat unintuitive, like a good secret that makes a lot of sense when you have context and can explain why it's your secret power (or "unfair advantage"). DORA/SPACE and others are excellent, but they always cover the basics. If you have good numbers there, people will probably not be quick to leave, but you cannot keep an excellent talent for many years by telling them, "it won't suck to be here." Track things that people should be excited about, and then deliver a story to upper management (or board) on why this is what will make you win. "Using optimization metrics to judge performance" and "Deciding measures alone rather than in community." are the biggest anti-patterns I've repeatedly seen. Talk about it with your CEO but offer something else to measure aligned with their needs.
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