Episode 373: I have no vision and not-so-positive environment
Sep 11, 2023
auto_awesome
The podcast discusses the importance of having a vision in the tech industry and explores the challenges of predicting the future. It emphasizes the need to gather data and understand customer needs to build a bigger vision. The hosts also provide advice on handling a negative work environment and navigating the tech job market. They share a frustrating meeting experience where a senior colleague disregards previous plans, leading to the speaker leaving the company.
When striving for a bigger vision in a project, it is essential to start by imagining new avenues of work and features that inspire, in addition to meeting immediate customer needs.
To gain buy-in for a bigger vision, one should focus on building proactive relationships, demonstrating confidence, and communicating solutions rather than just stating data.
Deep dives
Importance of Communicating with Confidence
When presenting data to executives, it is crucial to communicate with confidence and stand by the accuracy of the information. This includes preempting doubt questions and focusing on solutions rather than just stating the data. By demonstrating confidence and a proactive approach, you can build better working relationships and influence decision-making.
Learn from Past Challenges
Although the feedback from the meeting may have felt unfair, dwelling on it won't be productive. Instead, focus on learning from the experience and improving your presentation skills. Show up in future meetings prepared with upfront explanations of assumptions, data collection methods, and any contextual information that may help prevent doubt and foster mutual understanding.
Work on Forgiveness and Letting Go
To move forward, it may be helpful to let go of any lingering resentment towards the CTO and CFO. Focus on forgiving and realizing that holding onto grudges won't benefit your professional growth. By delivering outstanding performance in future presentations and collaborating effectively with your manager, you can improve the working relationship and regain trust.
Align with Your Manager's Expectations
Prior to important meetings, discuss the presentation content and approach with your manager to align expectations. Ensure your manager understands the results and parameters of the data analysis to support you during the meeting. By addressing concerns and demonstrating that you are actively working towards the desired outcomes, you can strengthen your position and foster a more supportive working relationship.
In this episode, Dave and Jamison answer these questions:
Love the show, you guys have saved my bacon more times than I can count!
I interviewed at an organization for a Senior Engineering role, but the interview went so well, they actually offered me the option to accept a Staff role! I definitely didn’t feel ready for that, but I accepted as a way to stretch and challenge myself. The company has been through some internal churn and re-arranging for most of my time there, and I bounced between a lot of projects, which means I’ve now been at the company coming up on 2 years, but not really had the chance to grow into the role. Now, I’ve been here awhile, don’t have a lot of excuses, and am bad at being a Staff Engineer. My biggest failing, is that I lack a bigger vision for our project, beyond just meeting customer needs for today. I’m not even sure how to start building that bigger vision! In my current project, this is especially apparent, because we do need to meet internal customer needs, but the end goal is a larger platform. We need features that inspire new avenues of work as well as enable current ones. How the heck do I even begin to start imagining what this bigger vision could be? Moreover, once I have that vision, how do I get buy in for that vision? My inability to do this kind of forward thinking has been a boat anchor around my ankles my entire career, and I’m lost as to where to even start.
Help me guys, I love my job, but I fear I’ve become the embodiment of the Peter Principle. Help me chew my ankles off to save my career
Listener Trevor asks,
I work as a data scientist at a small company. I joined the company specifically because of the positive work environment. I do mostly software development and until recently have only received positive reviews.
Recently we had a heated meeting with the CTO and CFO where we demonstrated that a customer’s request wasn’t feasible. The CTO challenged and expressed disbelief in our numbers which we had thoroughly analyzed and confirmed as accurate. I felt like their reaction was due to our results conflicting with our business needs.
After that, my manager began pushing me to prioritize data science tasks. He attributed the outcome of the meeting to my lack of attention to detail, even though the results were accurate. He also said this would affect my next performance review. We reached a resolution when I apologized and committed to improvement. I’ve only received positive feedback since, but I still feel the assessment was unfairly based on such a brief meeting.
Now I view the company and my manager differently. Without the positive work relationships with management and colleagues, I’m not sure what is keeping me here. Our tech stack is outdated, and there’s reluctance to change practices. For example, we didn’t have a CICD pipeline until only a few months ago. Additionally, the performance review and promotion schedules are nebulous and irregular.
I’m uncertain about my next steps. Should I address the perceived unfairness of the meeting feedback? Or would it be better to start exploring other job opportunities?
Get the Snipd podcast app
Unlock the knowledge in podcasts with the podcast player of the future.
AI-powered podcast player
Listen to all your favourite podcasts with AI-powered features
Discover highlights
Listen to the best highlights from the podcasts you love and dive into the full episode
Save any moment
Hear something you like? Tap your headphones to save it with AI-generated key takeaways
Share & Export
Send highlights to Twitter, WhatsApp or export them to Notion, Readwise & more
AI-powered podcast player
Listen to all your favourite podcasts with AI-powered features
Discover highlights
Listen to the best highlights from the podcasts you love and dive into the full episode