Weekly advice, observations, and inspiration for engineering leaders. Especially relevant for those at high-growth startups and big tech.
Newsletter for tech and engineering leaders
Weekly advice, observations, and inspiration for engineering leaders. Especially relevant for those at high-growth startups and big tech.
Hey! I’m glad to see something focused on real engineering leadership rather than buzz. I’ve noticed that engineers care more about workflow clarity and consistency than new tools every quarter. Where do you think the balance lies? Newsletters that dig into practice vs. hype tend to keep me coming back!
Amazing newsletters platform! Congratulations for launching it! And thank you for sharing your story with us! I would like to know if products of makers can be featured in The Pragmatic Engineer if it fits the ongoing topics? :)
Late to the game but love this! Subscribed. Gergely’s writing has helped me mature into an EM for the last 3 years and was the outside mentorship I needed. Few content like this currently exists thats recent (books like The Managers Path need to updated / are less actionable)
This is some great content, thanks!
I am a subscriber and an avid follower. Also a full stack dotnet developer. I've read his book "the tech resume inside out", which is very good. It helped me get a lot of offers. It also helped me help others to get good jobs. Also his blog is awesome. Has interesting topics regarding the tech market. Helped me understand my position in the market. His subscription is worth it. Gives you good insight into the tech space. I now have a clearer picture and can set my targets better.
Check the similar products section on this page, or browse the category pages linked in the tags above. Each category page shows all products for a given year, sorted by engagement.
A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.
Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.
Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.