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When I first heard of Manager READMEs, I thought they were a great idea.
After all, the goal was to help developers get to know their manager's style, what their manager values, and how best to work with them.
I believe that most programmers have only the vaguest notion what they manager wants, or how they work. I hoped that READMEs would be a step in the right direction.
After reading many of them, Iâve changed my mind. I hate them.
Let me be clearâââI think that the managers who write them are trying to do something good. But⊠it just doesnât work. At least, not for me.
Hereâs why I hate Manager READMEs:
- They feel arrogant. The premise is that someone with power tells someone less powerful how to treat them, what they expect, and how to best work with (for?) them. Iâve yet to hear anyone ask programmers, designers, PMs, or QA folks to write a README. Evidently, itâs only important to know how managers want to be treated. They seem to say âYou read my documentation and adjust yourself to fit it. Not the other way around.â
- They feel lazy. I know, managers are very busy. I get it. Iâve been there. Yet their only real job is to lead their team. Seriously, thatâs it. Instead of writing a user manual for themselves, they should build strong, professional, bi-directional trust with their team through 1:1s, ad-hoc discussions, and real personal connections. Manager READMEs appear to try and âscaleâ relationships, but this doesn't work.
- They make the programmers do all the work. Instead of the manager investing themselves into the programmer through time, honesty, and attention, it requires the programmers to shoulder the responsibility to âlearn how my boss works.â Not sure why this is bad? See point #1.
- They put the risks on the programmer. If a programmer misinterprets their Managerâs README, who suffers? The programmer does. Itâs the programmer whoâs in danger of looking stupid, not getting promoted, or maybe getting fired when they screw up. Managers often miss this because they arenât in danger, even if their README has mistakes.
- They make managers look bad. After reading through a few dozen READMEs today, I came away glad that I didnât work for many of these managers. Iâm sure they meant well, but stating âI expect you to always come prepared for our status meeting, or weâre going to talk about it.â doesnât inspire confidence. In fact, it makes me want to run away.
- It creates a false sense of âknowing someoneâ. If Iâd read a manager README from my last boss, I would have thought I knew him. But I wouldnât, not by a long shot. I wouldnât even really know âabout himâ, in the same way as reading Bill Gates biography helped me to know Bill Gates. These READMEs appear useful but actually arenât.
- They are aspirational, not accurate. I regularly ask managers âhow would you describe your leadership styleâ, and they tell me one of two things: Democratic Leader or Servant Leadership. Then I see these managers interact with their team, and they are nothing like that. The problem is these READMEâs are what people aspire to be, not what they really are. Thereâs a big difference between how people want to act, and how they really act. Most READMEs make the author look like a saint, when in fact, they simply donât know themselves very well.
- They are marketing. Servant leadership, democratic leadership, extreme ownership, blah blah blah. 99% of the managers I know havenât cracked a book on these topics, but have simply read the back cover. Itâs too easy in a Manager README to toss out these ideas as though they mean something, when in fact, they only exist to elevate the manager in the eyes of new employees.
- They go out of date quickly, just like documentation. Have you ever found coding docs that were out of date? How did you feel about that? Now imagine that you read your new Managerâs README, only to find out they no longer do things that way. Code documentation is almost always out of date, and this is no different.
- They feel absolute. Many contain statements about how the manager WILL act, or what they DO believe, or what they ALWAYS value. They feel etched in stone tablets. Worse, they leave little room for how to interpret different behavior. Lastly, they rarely provide a safe mechanism for asking questions when the employee is confused.
What to do instead?
You might have figured out that that the part of âManager READMEsâ I object to is the âManagerâ part.
So, burn your Manager README, but donât stop thereâŠ
Instead, ask EVERYONE to write a README about themselves!
(And ask them to update it regularly, too!)
Burn Your Manager README was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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