Reddit Reddit reviews First, Break All the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently

We found 2 Reddit comments about First, Break All the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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First, Break All the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently
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2 Reddit comments about First, Break All the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently:

u/healydorf · 4 pointsr/cscareerquestions

> I've never been a people manager.

There's oodles of books on this topic that will be far more beneficial than any academic program. I like Managing Humans. It's so much less about being confronted with dicey situations, and so much more about teasing out situations that may become dicey. There's a fine art to that. The things that are in-your-face as problems are trivial by comparison :)

Michael Lopp also has a podcast. Here's the one about management:

https://overcast.fm/+H4J-3Yk3c

Other book recommendations on the topics of "management" and "engineering management":

u/downrightacrobatics · 2 pointsr/softwaretesting

I've been in QA for about three years - started out in Support, kept getting stuck with the "weird" tickets, got better at troubleshooting and bug hunting, and eventually started doing testing with the dev team. Working at very small startups helped speed this process up tremendously. I'm now working at a ~500 person company (huuuuuge from my perspective, I'm used to a dozen coworkers, tops!) and learned Selenium/Capybara automated tests about a year ago.

I haven't found any quality-related books that have interested me, and most of the technical resources I've found have just been whatever pops up on Google/Stack Overflow. I am also subscribed to this subreddit, and /r/qualityassurance, but they're both pretty low-traffic, and I wish more articles were shared here. If there are any blog posts that have resonated with you, I'd love to take a look as well!

The best thing I've done for myself, technically, was re-writing our automated UI test suite in POM. This ended up saving me hours of work a few months later when we added a bunch of new features, and I just had to copy-paste a few things to test for them. This is a good overview:

https://www.guru99.com/page-object-model-pom-page-factory-in-selenium-ultimate-guide.html

Because of how much grief this saved me, I continue to evangelize for it!

I can, however, recommend some management/team/soft skills/business-y books! I'm not in love with my current company, so I end up reading a lot of these to keep myself sane and motivated. Here are some of the ones I've liked the best: