Welcome to MSDN Blogs
Sign in
|
Join
|
Help
Steve Rowe's Blog
Ruminations on Computing - Programming, Test Development, Management and More
This Blog
About
Email
Syndication
RSS 2.0
Atom 1.0
Search
News
Disclaimer
Computing
Raymond Chen
Larry Osterman
Audio Fool
Eric Anderson
{codesqueeze}
Coding Horror
Matthew van Eerde
James Whittaker
Testing
Braidy Tester
I. M. Testy
Testing Reflections
Test Obsessed
Tags
Architecture
Audio
Books
Computing History
Learning to Code
Management
Media Center
Netcasts
Other
Personal
Programming
Software Process
Testing
Video
Vim
Windows
Recent Posts
Design Patterns Are Not Outdated
Is there really a benefit in lossless audio formats?
A Review of a Kindle
StackOverflow DevDays
Forging a Team Identity
Archives
November 2009 (3)
October 2009 (1)
September 2009 (1)
August 2009 (1)
July 2009 (2)
May 2009 (2)
April 2009 (5)
March 2009 (4)
February 2009 (5)
January 2009 (2)
December 2008 (6)
November 2008 (2)
October 2008 (9)
September 2008 (6)
August 2008 (5)
July 2008 (3)
June 2008 (9)
May 2008 (9)
April 2008 (5)
March 2008 (12)
February 2008 (10)
January 2008 (8)
December 2007 (10)
November 2007 (14)
October 2007 (11)
September 2007 (13)
August 2007 (19)
July 2007 (21)
June 2007 (7)
May 2007 (11)
April 2007 (23)
March 2007 (14)
February 2007 (15)
January 2007 (16)
December 2006 (7)
November 2006 (2)
October 2006 (2)
September 2006 (2)
August 2006 (7)
July 2006 (2)
June 2006 (4)
May 2006 (7)
April 2006 (9)
March 2006 (11)
February 2006 (7)
January 2006 (5)
December 2005 (2)
November 2005 (3)
October 2005 (3)
September 2005 (2)
July 2005 (1)
June 2005 (2)
May 2005 (1)
April 2005 (5)
March 2005 (3)
February 2005 (6)
January 2005 (5)
November 2004 (3)
October 2004 (1)
April 2004 (1)
March 2004 (2)
July 2009 - Posts
Monday, July 27, 2009 7:49 AM
How to Interact with Your Team as a Manager
As one moves from being a lead (manager whose reports are individual contributors) to a manager (manager whose reports are leads), there is an important decision to be made about how to interact with your skip-level reports. That is, how should a manager
Posted by
SteveRowe
|
0 Comments
Filed under:
Management
Wednesday, July 01, 2009 10:33 AM
Be Intentional
My old manager used to always say, “Be intentional.” It took me a long time to comprehend exactly what he meant by this, but eventually I did and have come to appreciate the advice. What he meant was to always make active, conscious decisions
Posted by
SteveRowe
|
1 Comments
Filed under:
Other