Effective Engineering Manager

Micromanagement
Micromanagement is one of the most damaging patterns in engineering leadership, yet it often goes unnoticed until morale, productivity, and innovation have already been compromised. In this episode, Slava and Adam examine how micromanagement undermines trust and autonomy in engineering teams, creating bottlenecks and stifling collaboration. Rather than empowering engineers to take ownership, micromanagers overload themselves with tasks that should be delegated, leaving little room for strategic direction or team development.
The discussion explores the roots of micromanagement, including a lack of delegation skills, fear of failure in front of one’s own boss, and the absence of trust that often comes from failing to build relationships through 1:1s. These drivers lead to reduced creativity, slower decision-making, and higher attrition, particularly among high-performing engineers who seek environments that encourage autonomy. Micromanagement also creates a paradox: while it appears to be over-management, it is in fact a form of under-management, as leaders become too burdened to provide guidance, mentorship, or long-term vision.
Slava and Adam also address the broader organizational impact. Companies that tolerate micromanagement risk weakened culture, retention issues, and diminished innovation. Solutions include leadership coaching, support for managers transitioning away from micromanagement, or in some cases moving them into individual contributor roles where they can add value without harming team dynamics. For engineering managers working under a micromanaging boss, practical strategies such as shielding the team, focusing on positives in communication, and maintaining professional compliance can help reduce the negative effects.