• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Meet Ashwin

Helping Engineers To Become Tech Leaders

  • Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Courses
    • Generative AI 101
  • Products
    • 8 Mistakes to avoid in Tech Leadership (e-book)
  • Resources
  • Contact

engineering leader

How hands-on an Engineering Leader should be?

July 22, 2023 by Ashwin Leave a Comment

Engineering leader toolkit

Most of know and realise by this time that a hands-on engineering leader is respected and probably more successful in their career. But there are other key responsibilities for senior leaders, in addition to be technically active. In this post, I will share my thoughts on how hands-on an engineering leader should be and how to maintain a healthy balance with other duties.

What we mean by hands-on engineering leader?

By hands-on, we mean that an engineering leader, irrespective of his or her seniority, must be able to understand working details of products and applications they own.

Here are some example hands-on activities of a software engineering leader:

  • Participate and contribute to system architecture
  • Lead technical design and solution discussions
  • Understand technical and delivery metrics
  • Articulate with engineerings in technical language

But, do these alone justify the role of a leader?

Probably not. The true value of a senior engineering leader comes from another important contribution.

A senior leader must be a multiplier – enabling and empowering others to perform at their fullest potential.

If you haven’t read it yet, Multipliers by Liz Wiseman is an excellent book on this topic.

A leader must create a right environment and help everyone in the team play their “A” game. This is where their true value comes in.

Also in his iconic book High Output Management, Andy Grove talks about high leverage activities for managers and leaders.

A high leverage activity is something that sets an individual or team for success over an extended period of time.

Here are some high leverage activities for a software engineering leader:

  • Coaching, training and mentoring employees
  • Effective 1:1 meetings
  • Creating a culture of efficient meetings
  • Setting up right tools and platforms to increase engineering productivity
  • Using right metrics and creating feedback loops for better software delivery

In short, any activity that has a throughtput-to-effort ratio greater than 1:1 is a high leverage activity.

To be or not to be…

In essence, as you grow in your career as an engineering leader – try and maintain a good mix of hands-on and high leverage activities.

While being hands-on is essential to continue and wield your expert power, high leverage activities are the ones that can up your game to the next level.

Always remember – “What got you here, won’t get you there!” (Thanks Marshall Goldsmith!)

Filed Under: Leadership, Life Tagged With: engineering leader, high leverage activities, leadership, multipliers, successful leader

Primary Sidebar

Connect with me on

  • GitHub
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Recent Posts

  • The Evolution of Data Platforms : Beyond Data Lakehouses
  • Book review : The Almanack of Naval Ravikant
  • Communicate your Software Design better with C4 Model
  • Understand your Stakeholders with a Stakeholder Map
  • How To Create Status Reports That Work?
  • Topics

    • Life
      • Leadership
      • Negotiations
      • Personal Finance
      • Productivity
      • Reading
      • Self Improvement
    • Post Series
      • Intro to Blockchain
    • Tech
      • AI
      • Blockchain
      • Career
      • Certifications
      • Cloud
      • Data
      • Enterprise
      • Leadership
      • Presentations
      • Reporting
      • Software Design
      • Stakeholders

Top Posts

  • Understanding the Paradigm of AI Tools, Apps and Agents
  • Create your first Application Load Balancer (ALB) in AWS
  • A Framework to Acing Your Next Tech Presentation
  • What is Blockchain and Why do we need it?
  • Event-driven Systems

Copyright © 2025 · Ashwin Chandrasekaran · WordPress · Log in
All work on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
The views and opinions expressed in this website are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of the organization he is employed with

  • 🚀 I just launched a free course to learn Generative AI Fundamentals on Udemy! 🚀Enroll now