FlareStart
HomeNewsHow ToSources
FlareStart

Where developers start their day. All the tech news & tutorials that matter, in one place.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • News
  • Tutorials
  • Sources
  • Privacy Policy

Connect

© 2026 FlareStart. All rights reserved.

Back to articles
From IC to Manager: First Steps for New Engineering Leads
NewsCareer

From IC to Manager: First Steps for New Engineering Leads

via Dev.toSteve McDougall3h ago

The first thing I want to tell you is that the discomfort you are feeling is not a warning sign. It is the job working correctly. When you step into an engineering leadership role for the first time, almost everything that made you good at your previous job stops being directly useful. The skills that got you promoted - the ability to reason through a hard problem, write clean code, ship features reliably - those are no longer your primary tools. Your primary tool is now other people. And working with people is a fundamentally different craft from working with code. That transition is jarring for most engineers, and it catches a lot of first-time managers completely off guard. Not because they are not capable, but because nobody told them what to actually expect. So let's talk about what to actually expect. What Just Changed (And What Didn't) Here is the uncomfortable truth about moving into engineering management: your output is no longer measurable in the same way. When you were an I

Continue reading on Dev.to

Opens in a new tab

Read Full Article
0 views

Related Articles

Rivian gets another $1B from Volkswagen
News

Rivian gets another $1B from Volkswagen

TechCrunch • 23m ago

Firefox & Gtk Emoji picker
News

Firefox & Gtk Emoji picker

Lobsters • 39m ago

News

Uses for nested promises

Lobsters • 45m ago

Yes, you need a smart bird feeder in your life - and this one's on sale
News

Yes, you need a smart bird feeder in your life - and this one's on sale

ZDNet • 1h ago

Apple pulls the plug on its high-priced, oft-neglected Mac Pro desktop
News

Apple pulls the plug on its high-priced, oft-neglected Mac Pro desktop

Ars Technica • 1h ago

Discover More Articles