Managing growth: how tech companies position millennial managers for success

New tech, a new generation of leaders
New tech, a new generation of leaders

In the Bay Area and other tech hubs around the world, successful tech companies have grown from small, tight-knit startups with a handful of employees crammed into an office or shared space into companies with hundreds of employees distributed around the globe. Whereas a startup with eight employees might have had almost everyone sitting in the same room, when companies grow larger, it almost always means multiple offices, remote workers and a much more diverse set of employees.

With such a cycle of rapid growth and change now the norm, how do companies ensure that they maintain the level of quality and innovation that first fueled their growth? As companies scale their teams to keep up with aggressive growth goals, a new challenge arises: companies are increasingly forced to promote technical developers, engineers and other specialist individual contributors into managerial roles in order to manage the influx of additional team members. Someone has to be the manager, right? And you can’t have dozens of developers or specialists all reporting to one person, let alone even ten.

  • Paul Sebastien is VP and GM at Udemy