|
Each week, I share one insight. One piece of wisdom. One question to reflect on. (and a little Lagniappe) InsightIt is easy to treat Change Management as a means of controlling the change itself, as if changes were discrete events you could shove into a box on a specific timeline. But change is continuous, it's fluid, and it's much more powerful than any of us can truly control. Systems were changing long before we intervened, and they will continue to change long after we are gone. Surfers understand this intuitively. They can't control the formation of ocean waves. Instead, they learn to read the waves, making adjustments to their positions so they can participate in the act of surfing. The practice isn't controlling the environment; it's about developing the skill and presence to move within it. That's the magic of change management. It's not about taming the ocean, it's learning to surf. WisdomThe only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance. - Alan Watts ReflectionAre you building processes that assume change stops, or ones that assume it never will? Lagniappe
|
Practical insights on platform engineering, developer experience, and building teams that ship. Each issue is written to be useful, actionable, and applicable. No filler, no promotions-only emails. Enter your email and sign up for free right now.
Each week, I share one insight. One piece of wisdom. One question to reflect on. (and a little Lagniappe) Insight This week LiteLLM, the most popular open-source LLM proxy in the python ecosystem, was hit by a really gnarly software supply chain attack. The awful part was that the attack vector was through Trivy, a security scanner LiteLLM trusted to help protect its code. Attackers compromised Trivy's GitHub Actions and used that to steal LiteLLM's PyPI publishing credentials, and used them...
Each week, I share one insight. One piece of wisdom. One question to reflect on. (and a little Lagniappe) Insight In Will Larson's book, Crafting Engineering Strategy, he nails why so many executives fail at executing on strategy. However, my experience is that engineering strategies fail for very mundane reasons—the most common of which is that executives assume their strategy will roll itself out. The second most common reason is forgetting to spend time validating the details. Both are...
Each week, I share one insight. One piece of wisdom. One question to reflect on. (and a little Lagniappe) Insight Platform engineering boils down to consistently delivering positive results on high impact internal projects. Good platform engineering initiatives are measurable and improve the wellbeing of the team (and by extension the organization). To pull this off platform engineers follow a process. Observe and identify real problems Develop a hypothesis Execute on a plan that includes...