They say the only constant in life is change. In the technology industry, that’s only partially true. By building and nurturing a series of constants, businesses can set themselves up to flourish for the long haul, no matter which technology revolution we may face next.

Organizations that implement fundamental engineering, architectural, and operational practices can undoubtedly weather times of change, having built the extensible IT infrastructure and processes to help them chart a necessary path forward. But what does it take to truly thrive in periods of uncertainty? The core attributes of organizations I’ve seen most successful with sustaining engineering excellence not only balance but artfully blend a sense of high ambition and resilience, a culture of continuous learning, and authentic approaches to leadership.

Brian McMahon

Managing Vice President of Finance Technology, Capital One.

Cultivate High Ambition and Resilience Through Data

First, successful engineering organizations measure the right things and turn data into actionable insights and targeted learning paths focused on skill-building, growth, and professional development. For example, if teams are slow to detect an incident with their application, it may be due to improper monitoring and alerting. If cycle times are missing the mark, it might be that the engineer could improve test automation skills. If cloud storage or cloud costs are unnecessarily high, perhaps the infrastructure was poorly designed or overly complex. 

In all of these cases, metrics and a test-and-learn approach should be embedded into the natural rhythms of the organization such that data informs whether teams persist on the current path or pivot to different approaches. This continuous retrospection and feedback loop can help leaders to make impactful decisions, take action, and best support and coach their teams in the pursuit of excellence.

These data-driven insights are also key to identifying areas where engineers spend time on manual or rote tasks, much of which could be allayed with automation. Automation can be an incredibly powerful tool to help shift engineers’ capacity away from these tasks to focus on more creative problem-solving and career-defining work. Machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI) has added rocket fuel to this effort, enabling the automation of complex and time-consuming workflows and activities. With the bandwidth unlocked by automation, engineers can turn their sights to constant experimentation and innovation (which is an exciting prospect when you’re working to solve challenging problems in financial services, for example).

Key performance indicators and data should permeate beyond product performance, too. Implementing these metrics into an organizations’ performance and talent management routines can also help reinforce the health of the organization, which is particularly important as leaders continue to raise the talent bar. In my experience, it’s these engineering best practices – measuring what matters, striving for excellence in those metrics, and supporting engineers in hitting ambitious targets – that are not only the framework for pursuing bold innovations but they’re also the key to attracting and retaining teams of world-class talent.

Fostering a Growth Mindset and Culture of Continuous Learning

Put simply, great engineers want to work with other great engineers. They expect engineering excellence from the organizations they join (and stay in) because this high talent bar is the foundation for continuously shipping products with meaningful outcomes for the business and customers. For leaders of these high-performing organizations, the pursuit of top talent is “always on.”

All engineering leaders, regardless of level of expertise or career stage, must understand that their job also includes the continued pursuit of new personal skills and knowledge. Here, leaders must allocate time and capacity for all team members to seek tailored training, certifications, and mentoring to stay at the forefront of technology and AI skills. Establishing rituals like “Invest in Yourself Days,” where associates can take advantage of learning and professional development opportunities on meeting-light days, and creating access to user-friendly learning hubs with focused learning tracks are helpful tactics to foster a growth mindset within any organization.

Leading with Authenticity and Truth-Seeking

Finally, in addition to leveraging data to inform operations and creating skill-building rituals and platforms for learning, leaders should invest in building their teams’ confidence and sense of psychological safety by demonstrating healthy behaviors from the top. This means nurturing an engineering culture that embraces change as an opportunity, where teammates are comfortable seeking help in areas of weakness, and where they can embrace failures or mistakes as learning opportunities. 

It’s important to not only reinforce wins, but also to honor and elevate uncovered truths that help organizations or enterprises in scalable ways and for the long haul. By having difficult and honest conversations about gaps or failures in our systems and processes, we can promote a culture of individual success and a team mentality in which the focus is on solving tough problems for the greater good.

For me, the key to sustaining engineering excellence in a world of constant change is this three-pronged approach to leadership: using data to influence organizational rhythms and routines (the spine), elevating a passion for continuous learning and growth (the brain), and reinforcing authenticity and truth-seeking in work and interactions (the heart). When leaders possess all three – the spine, the brain, and the heart – they are well-poised to scale and lead great organizations in the long haul.

We can survive change or thrive in it. We can achieve one-time engineering excellence or continue raising the bar. By instilling a culture of data-driven innovation, a growth mindset and championing heart-centered leadership, technology executives can equip their teams to turn the complexity of change into a wellspring of competitive advantage.

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This article was produced as part of TechRadarPro’s Expert Insights channel where we feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today. The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/news/submit-your-story-to-techradar-pro

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