I'm about 2 for 8 but you gotta try sometimes.
Being the bearer of bad “stoves are hot to the touch” news makes you a downer.
Not enough of you believed and now this balloon is adrift and will never make it to Imaginationland.
You should have warned me about this more convincingly!
All. the. time...
Pervasive cognitive glitch: inability to distinguish between _problems_ and _people_.
Identifying the problem ==> causing the problem.
This is why I find if you don't already have good relations with management and trust each others judgement, it really doesn't matter.
They will do as they wish, and throw you under the bus as needed.
He then asked me to do weekly RAG status for stakeholders. So I did and it all slowly turned red with no easy remediation.
He did two things that made me realize it was time to go:
First, when I suggested that "if I report red status all year and then it doesn't complete on time, but I kept everyone well informed - am I going to be rewarded end of year".. to which I got nervous laughter response.
Second, he started talking about "what if we change the definition of done", such that we just start marking things amber/green because like.. well some of it is running in QA or hey its like 70% done, so why not mark it done?
Just seemed like he handed me the keys to a sinking boat as he stepped off in the last life boat.
This is protection in adversarial scenarios, but is also just a great habit In general. Verbal discussion is really good for getting people on the same page, but without notes it's very easy for details and decisions to get lost.
If you are in the kind of adversarial management relationship where this is necessary, you have already lost.
Do you think this kind of guy, when you point to "hey remember the conversation, here's the follow-up mail with the meeting notes" he's gonna be like "oh yeah, I was wrong, you are right." ?
It's good to have meeting agendas and follow up minutes, I just rarely find that they are going to help you litigate anything. More to remind you how a decision came to be.
That way, it's unavoidably in front of everyone's face, and you get the perk of ironclad timestamps in the document-editing history.
If you ever have a beverage with me or drop me an email I'm happy to discuss without naming names, but public is unwise, sadly.
One of these years I'm going to retire and start a youtube channel. If you like similar stories, ThePrimagen[1] definitely has a similar flavor. He talks about some situations at Netflix that are eerily familiar, even though I've never worked for them.
You are wrong because you were right but unable to persuade me. Not "hmm, maybe I should be more receptive to my reports feedback".