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Average rating4
For years, companies have rewarded their most effective engineers with management positions. But treating management as the default path for an engineer with leadership ability doesn't serve the industry well--or the engineer. The staff engineer's path allows engineers to contribute at a high level as role models, driving big projects, determining technical strategy, and raising everyone's skills. This in-depth book shows you how to understand your role, manage your time, master strategic thinking, and set the standard for technical work. You'll read about how to be a leader without direct authority, how to plan ahead to make the right technical decisions, and how to make everyone around you better, while still growing as an expert in your domain. By exploring the three pillars of a staff engineer's job, Tanya Reilly, a veteran of the staff engineer track, shows you how to: Take a broad, strategic view when thinking about your work Dive into practical tactics for making projects succeed Determine what "good engineering" means in your organization
Reviews with the most likes.
Has a lot of good information about ways to be effective in a role that has no clear definition. The information will definitely apply more to employees of large companies with a diverse range of possible projects for a staff engineer to take on.
Tanya Reilly brings lots of clarity, actionable advice, and guidance to the Staff+ engineer's path in her book The Staff Engineer's Path. It is a well-rounded and practical book teaching you how to grow as an engineer and learn how to bring change in any organization. The content structure is compelling, engages the reader on the initial read, and allows them to reference the material later easily—a definite read.
Tanya Reilly's worldbuilding with the Locator, Topographical, Treasure, and Trail maps feels on-point and helps consolidate the big-picture thinking. Seeing a drawing of a staff engineer building the proverbial bridge to connect gaps between organizations long before a quarterly planning bridge is built sticks with you.
Undoubtedly, The Staff Engineer's Path by Tanya Reilly will get frequently compared to Will Larson's Staff Engineer. While Larson's book has good content, Tanya Reilly's book feels much higher caliber and more thoughtfully structured. Both books do not compete but rather complement each other, although if I had to pick one, I would go for The Staff Engineer's Path.
I highly recommend The Staff Engineer's Path to all software engineers and managers. Even if you're not aspiring to be a Staff+ engineer or are on the management track, the book will build appropriate expectations for what a Staff+ engineer can or should be.