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D**J
Heartfelt and brilliant
This is a heartfelt and brilliant book.If you, like me, have been reading the blog Rands in Repose for many a year -- or whether you're completely new to the mind of Rands -- a.k.a. Michael Lopp, you're in for a treat. I've been following the blog for something verging on 15 years but every "small thing" in this book is brand new.The "small things" are like finely crafted gemstones -- faceted and polished to focus their light of wisdom. Each small thing manages to capture and distill an “unspoken truth” about what makes effective management and leadership (as well as the difference between them!)The prose is direct, honest, and warm. Think of an old friend or mentor offering you advice for different stages of your career. The author spans the range: starting out as a manager, to a manager of managers (director), to a manager of manager of managers (executive). The description of the New Manager Death Spiral (Small Thing 9) is eerily accurate and worth the price of the book alone. The insights into and explanations of the thoughts and worries of directors (Delegate Until It Hurts, Small Thing 11) and executives (why they always seem to be fire-fighting and How to Build a Rumor, Small Thing 24) are incredibly valuable, whether you’re an executive or whether, like most, you (eventually) roll up and report into one.There is much to learn from in this book -- it can be read straight through, but it also demands to be returned to, drawn upon in the movements when the poignant lesson of one of its “small things” might just what is needed.
K**R
Junk!
Total waste of my time and money. The tone of the book is so irritating that I had to stop reading after 70-80 pages.It looked as if he had a few good points to make but what I found beyond was just ramblings and he comes across as a total jerk...
K**E
Unfocused but interesting
This book promises a list of small things you can do to improve your leadership skills, but really it’s a much more philosophical book than that. Often, I had to really dig to figure out what the “small thing” or action I was supposed to glean from an example. Sometimes I couldn’t find it. The organization of the book really doesn’t make sense, it’s more like “anecdotes about leadership and lessons to be learned from them”, and splitting the book up between Manager, Director, and Executive is not relevant to most of the examples and stories. Anyway, it was interesting!
J**H
Enjoyable and insightful
It was a pleasure to read this book. In nearly every chapter I found myself laughing or agreeing with a non-trivial insight or at least one stated more plainly than I've heard it expressed before. This is someone that takes his craft seriously. I do think Software Engineering leaders will enjoy the book the most because of the small anecdotes that will be easier to connect to. But most of the insights are not domain-specific. I would suggest reading it slowly and savoring the items. Don't read more than a few at a time because the points that he makes are worth wrestling with. Don't expect to agree with everything. But expect that each nugget is hard-won and worthy of consideration.
S**H
Amazing book for leaders in tech industry
I was initially skeptical of buying this book. I already have Lopp’s managing humans book. But this one is entirely different. It goes a lot into the depth of being a leader or manager within a tech company - medium sized startups to tech giants. The practices listed here may not resonate with folks outside of tech industry. But for someone like me who is a growing manager in this industry, I found this be full of gold!
V**H
Lots of good bits about managing and leading teams
Relevant and actionable recommendations on leading and managing teams. The casual delivery makes the content more accessible. The bit about running distant meetings is on the money.
J**N
Build trust and respect with principled consistency
This powerful and easy to read book presents thirty small things that you can do to build trust and to become a true leader to your team.It takes you from Individual Contributor to Manager, Director and Executive, covering the changing roles and how they differ as the span of control grows.It covers pitfalls (New Manager Death Spiral) and sometimes unexpected areas of focus (when recruiting, spend an hour per day per open role). Communication is a key theme, whether that's how to hold effective 1-2-1s, to say the hard thing or how to communicate difficult change through a large org. It recognises that you'll be bad at each of these roles for at least a few years until you master them, so embrace failures, learn from them and growth through the experience.If you already follow Rands, then you'll be familiar with a lot of this content from his excellent blog. The book takes this to a next level, grouping, ordering and curating a common set of advice that is important for all leaders.You'll read it fast, read it again slowly and then dip in again and again as time passes and you hit fresh challenges.
B**8
Great little book
I love this book. It keeps it short, well structured into different levels of management and adds context with great and fun to read examples. Worth a read for every manager!
J**R
Lopp's best yet
Well organized with practical, actionable advice for software development leaders.
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