dashboards

What are you really measuring?

We need to talk about feedback loops. Short feedback loops are the heartbeat of Agile. Once, cutting development cycles to two weeks was a massive achievement (and for many, it still is). But the core principle, learning quickly from what we build, seems to have been lost, even though the tools to do it are better than ever. Continuous delivery, continuous discovery, and releasing features to users early and often are now standard for many web-based products. Some ship dozens of times a day, others test with users early and often. Even for teams dealing with hardware or complex deployment cycles, the potential for rapid feedback exists. ...

May 15, 2026 · 7 min · Sofia
Reading

What I found interesting in April

Here are some blog posts and articles I thought found interesting the last month. (Books will be covered separately.) AI related Bob has written two good blog posts with scathing critique on how many organisations adopt AI and neglect solving their real issues. I found them very interesting and funny, even though I don’t agree with everything. AI won’t save your dysfunctional organisation “I recently watched a team use AI to generate a comprehensive competitive analysis. The document was impressive: well-structured, extensively detailed, professionally formatted. It was also built entirely on the team’s flawed assumptions about their market position, which the AI had helpfully elaborated into fifty pages of confident wrongness.” Ouch. I don’t fully agree with point 4, there are lots of good managers as well and in a best case scenario, they get to spend more time doing valuable things - spread knowledge, improve clarity, solving problems, coordinating, helping their teams grow and develop. ...

May 13, 2026 · 7 min · Sofia
Speed vs stability

Speed vs stability: the divide between product and engineering

The urgency gap Over the last few months, I’ve sat across from product leaders and engineers in different companies and they all told me the same story: a frustration from product managers and the leadship team about lack of urgency in dev teams and whether they truly care about the company’s success. Product leaders and managers are super eager to deliver new features and to fulfill commitments to customers, but feel that the development teams are slow and don’t care if a feature gets pushed. “Why don’t the engineers feel a sense of urgency? They don’t care if a feature gets delayed for weeks!” “It feels like they don’t care about the success of the company!”. ...

April 30, 2026 · 11 min · Sofia