Why Every Engineering Team Needs an AI-First Development Workflow in 2026
The teams shipping twice as fast aren't working harder — they've rebuilt their workflows around AI assistance at every layer.…
Read →The most common failure mode in engineering 1-on-1s is that they’re actually status updates. The manager asks what the engineer is working on; the engineer reports. Thirty minutes of this, weekly, is a significant time investment that produces very little value for either party. The engineer already knows what they’re working on, and the manager could get this information asynchronously.
Open every 1-on-1 with a question that gives the engineer control: “What’s most on your mind this week?” This yields very different conversations than “How are things going?” The second is a social opener that usually produces “Fine.” The first surfaces actual concerns, blockers, and opportunities that the engineer has been thinking about.
Most managers address career development in the annual review and never touch it otherwise. The engineers who develop fastest have managers who bring career development into regular 1-on-1 conversations — not as a formal exercise, but as a genuine ongoing conversation about what the engineer wants to be building towards and how their current work connects to that.
Team dynamics friction (often the thing engineers are least likely to bring up unprompted), career progression and development, what’s working well in their work environment, and what’s frustrating or blocking them. These conversations require trust to have productively, and trust requires consistency — 1-on-1s that get cancelled are more damaging than most managers realize.
The teams shipping twice as fast aren't working harder — they've rebuilt their workflows around AI assistance at every layer.…
Read →We surveyed 400 engineering teams who made the switch either direction. The results challenge most of what you've read on…
Read →Dotfiles, aliases, and a few overlooked tools that compound into serious productivity gains over time.
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