What Can I Do to Make You Stay?
The ultimate farewell gift and how you can retain connections beyond your job
đ Hi, this is Akash with this weekâs newsletter. I write about leadership and growth in software engineering. We have now crossed 3000 subscribers! It feels unreal. Thank you for your readership â¤ď¸.
This week, Iâm sharing how you can become indispensable at work by making only a few changes. Tips here will help you stand out and build long-lasting connections at work. Hope you enjoy this edition!
In this tech industry, weâre told that everyone is disposable. But when you decide to leave, you want to hear, âWhat can I do to make you stay?â Doesnât that sound nice? To me, it sounds like I did something right.
When I announced that I would leave Google, I didnât expect senior leaders to ask me to stay. Then again, when I was leaving Apple last week, the same thing happened.
I didnât change my decision on either occasion, but felt valued. Iâm connected to all of those leaders to this day. I will share a few practical tips that will help you build real connections that last beyond your job.
â Main Takeaways
How to build relations that last longer than your tenure
3 ways you earn the most respect of your leaders
đ¤ Announcement: Future after leaving FAANG twice!
Last week, I shared that I had left Apple. This was my second FAANG job, and I quit. Transformers started the revolution a few years ago. Agents are on the rise. But how do we trust agents to make decisions for us? To secure AI for everyone, Iâve joined another talented founder to start our own journey.
If your organization is hesitating to connect enterprise data with AI, reach out; we can certainly help.
Back to the topic, how can you separate yourself from the most?
Take it across the finish line
Skip manager: âOur director is concerned about whether we can deliver feature A on time. It was planned for delivery last quarter.â
Me: âSorry about the delay. We have finished 90% of the work; before officially supporting it, we will perform stress testing.â
We often make the mistake of focusing too narrowly. Itâs easy to lose track of all the moving pieces and leave things unfinished.
One thing we overlook is how it affects the entire organization. Have you ever delayed finishing a project for other âinterestingâ work? But itâs not just you whoâs accountable. Your leaders are also responsible for delivering the same project to their boss.
Youâd be surprised how often things are dropped on the floor at the last mile. The best way to earn your place is by delivering complete results.
If leaders donât have to worry about delivery when you own the piece, theyâll not let you go easy.
Be dependable: When I was the TL for Chromeâs security, my manager told me, âIf our director doesnât have to get involved, thatâs a success.â He meant being responsible enough with our ownership and delivering on our promises.
Stay out of the negative headlines.
Make your leaderâs life easier.
Communicate timely: Unexpected things happen, so keeping everyone informed is important. People like surprises, but only the good ones. If a project is delayed, communicate that.
â âWe couldnât complete OKR1 due to the dependency on team X.â
â âDue to an unexpected dependency on team X, we might be unable to complete OKR1.â
Draw a clear finish line: We often donât define success criteria. It leads to confusion and unrealistic expectations. During planning and sign-offs, declare success criteria and how to measure them.
â âMake our API server faster.â
â âImprove the latency of our API server by 50%.â
Form your opinions
How often have you held off your opinions before a senior leader? Be honest.
I have multiple times. As I grew and observed other respected engineers, I noticed one thing. Almost everyone was opinionated. It took me a while, but I realized we are paid for our opinions.
From which library to use to what should be the next priority for an area, engineers are paid for their intellect. (Side note: thatâs why ChatGPT is not taking anyoneâs job anytime soon)
Donât be afraid to question decisions even when itâs coming from higher up. Few things to keep in mind,
Express opinions freely to unblock progress. Views that donât provide a solution are ineffective.
â âInvesting in X is not going to help our organization.â
â âInstead of focusing on X, we should focus on A because âŚâ
Form your opinions based on ground truth.
Views are not to support a side or ego.
Be open to changing your opinion for the right rationale.
Resolve opposing opinions by listening to others.
Have othersâ back
Teams and organizations are exactly like society. It works better with collaboration.
If youâre responsible for cooking food at home, would you stay hungry if youâre sick? No, your partner will accommodate.
Similarly, if a peer is having difficulty delivering, you shouldnât use it as an excuse for missing the deadline. This also applies beyond a teamâs boundary.
One of my biggest mistakes in my career was overlooking another teamâs struggle. It involved deciding whoâd implement a piece between our teams. Logically, it made sense for them to own, but I ignored all other factors.
Going through this experience, I learned that you get support when youâre supportive. Here are some key things to implement,
Donât wait to build connections till you need them.
Foster a supportive environment and go above and beyond.
Treat others like you want to be treated.
Words travel faster in an organization. These behaviors are more visible than youâd think. And which leader would want to lose a person like that?
đ đ Parting Thoughts
The tech industry is relatively small. Your reputation travels with you as you move. Your connections and their endorsements make a huge difference.
Iâm still in touch with my previous leaders. Some of them made starting a company possible. Leaving a job is okay; donât leave future opportunities at the door.
Today, we explored three ways you can become indispensable at your organization. Iâve benefitted from them, and Iâve no doubt youâll too.
To recap, practice the following,
Take it across the finish line
Be dependable
Stay out of the negative headlines.
Make your leaderâs life easier.
Communicate timely
â âWe couldnât complete OKR1 due to the dependency on team X.â
â âDue to an unexpected dependency on team X, we might be unable to complete OKR1.â
Draw a clear finish line
â âMake our API server faster.â
â âImprove the latency of our API server by 50%.â
Form your opinions
Donât hesitateÂ
â âInvesting in X is not going to help our organization.â
â âInstead of focusing on X, we should focus on A because âŚâ
Base it on ground truth
Views are not to support a side or ego.
Be open to change
Resolve opposing opinions by listening to others.
Have othersâ back
Donât wait to build connections till you need them.
Foster a supportive environment and go above and beyond.
Treat others like you want to be treated
What is one piece of advice youâd give someone to earn the ultimate farewell gift?
Share them in the comments!
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đ đŹ Get In Touch
Want to chat? Find me on LinkedIn.
If you want me to cover a particular area of leadership, you can reach out directly to akash@chromium.org.Â
If you enjoyed this content, please đ share it with friends and consider đ subscribing if you havenât already. Your đ response really motivates me to keep going.
Excellent advice, Akash!
As a former agency owner, I liked it when people figured things out on their own. We could deliver faster because I decided only on the critical questions.
I like to implement the same approach now as a full-time employee, as you said:
âIf our director doesnât have to get involved, thatâs a success.â â this pretty much captures it.
Great article. The industry is indeed small :D