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Seems like there would be a benefit to having a manager that is actually further from the problem itself. Less precious about details and more focused on universal principles.

What ex-engineer managers had was respect for the craft itself. You can respect the work of the team without doing it in the past.



I used to assume that. Until I met folks who seemed to be able to switch from micro details to macro "big picture" rather seamlessly. The extreme example of that is a Gates review[0]. Maybe that's why John Sculley never stood a chance.

It's more than respect for the craft, it's understanding the problem space.

[0] https://www.joelonsoftware.com/2006/06/16/my-first-billg-rev...


That sounds like a different role to me. I think we’re talking about different things. Product Managers vs managing the work flow / engineering work.

That was a funny read, thanks.


Product managers should never manage engineers, period.


Why not? Isn't a startup CEO basically an engineering manager and product manager in one?


> Isn't a startup CEO basically an engineering manager and product manager in one?

Reality is not always equals to expectations


Why's that?




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