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Book Description

Read hilarious stories with serious lessons that Michael Lopp extracts from his varied and sometimes bizarre experiences as a manager at Apple, Pinterest, Palantir, Netscape, Symantec, Slack, and Borland. Many of the stories first appeared in primitive form in Lopp's perennially popular blog, Rands in Repose. The Third Edition of Managing Humans contains a whole new season of episodes from the ongoing saga of Lopp's adventures in Silicon Valley, together with classic episodes remastered for high fidelity and freshness.

Whether you're an aspiring manager, a current manager, or just wondering what the heck a manager does all day, there is a story in this book that will speak to you—and help you survive and prosper amid the general craziness of dysfunctional bright people caught up in the chase of riches and power. Scattered in repose among these manic misfits are managers, an even stranger breed of people who, through a mystical organizational ritual, have been given power over the futures and the bank accounts of many others.

Lopp's straight-from-the-hip style is unlike that of any other writer on management and leadership. He pulls no punches and tells stories he probably shouldn't. But they are magically instructive and yield Lopp's trenchant insights on leadership that cut to the heart of the matter—whether it's dealing with your boss, handling a slacker, hiring top guns, or seeing a knotty project through to completion.

Writing code is easy. Managing humans is not. You need a book to help you do it, and this is it.

What You'll Learn

  • Lead engineers

  • Handle conflict

  • Hire well

  • Motivate employees

  • Manage your boss

  • Discover how to say no

  • Understand different engineering personalities

  • Build effective teams

  • Run a meeting well

  • Scale teams

Who This Book Is For

Managers and would-be managers staring at the role of a manager wondering why they would ever leave the safe world of bits and bytes for the messy world of managing humans. The book covers handling conflict, managing wildly differing personality types, infusing innovation into insane product schedules, and figuring out how to build a lasting and useful engineering culture.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Frontmatter
  3. 1. The Management Quiver
    1. Part Frontmatter
    2. 1. Don’t Be a Prick
    3. 2. Managers Are Not Evil
    4. 3. Stables and Volatiles
    5. 4. The Rands Test
    6. 5. How to Run a Meeting
    7. 6. The Twinge
    8. 7. The Update, the Vent, and the Disaster
    9. 8. The Monday Freakout
    10. 9. Lost in Translation
    11. 10. Agenda Detection
    12. 11. Dissecting the Mandate
    13. 12. Information Starvation
    14. 13. Subtlety, Subterfuge, and Silence
    15. 14. Managementese
    16. 15. You’re Not Listening
    17. 16. Fred Hates the Off-Site
    18. 17. A Different Kind of DNA
    19. 18. An Engineering Mindset
    20. 19. Tear It Down
    21. 20. Titles Are Toxic
    22. 21. Saying No
  4. 2. The Process is the Product
    1. Part Frontmatter
    2. 22. 1.0
    3. 23. The Process Myth
    4. 24. How to Start
    5. 25. Taking Time to Think
    6. 26. The Value of the Soak
    7. 27. Capturing Context
    8. 28. Trickle Theory
    9. 29. When the Sky Falls
    10. 30. Hacking Is Important
    11. 31. Entropy Crushers
  5. 3. Versions of You
    1. Part Frontmatter
    2. 32. Bored People Quit
    3. 33. Bellwethers
    4. 34. The Ninety-Day Interview
    5. 35. Managing Nerds
    6. 36. NADD
    7. 37. A Nerd in a Cave
    8. 38. Meeting Creatures
    9. 39. Incrementalists and Completionists
    10. 40. Organics and Mechanics
    11. 41. Inwards, Outwards, and Holistics
    12. 42. The Wolf
    13. 43. Free Electrons
    14. 44. The Old Guard
    15. 45. Rules for the Reorg
    16. 46. An Unexpected Connection
    17. 47. Avoiding the Fez
    18. 48. A Glimpse and a Hook
    19. 49. Nailing the Phone Screen
    20. 50. Your Resignation Checklist
    21. 51. Shields Down
    22. 52. Chaotic, Beautiful Snowflakes
  6. Backmatter
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