The GitHub Blog 03月28日
How engineers can use one-on-ones with their manager to accelerate career growth
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文章探讨了工程师如何充分利用与经理的1v1会议,将其从简单的状态汇报转变为推动职业发展、解决问题和发掘新机会的强大工具。通过转变思维模式,将会议视为个人职业生涯的系统设计评审,工程师可以主动塑造工作环境和职业轨迹。文章强调了在会议中沟通目标、寻求反馈、讨论长期职业发展的重要性,并提供了具体的框架和建议,以帮助工程师更有效地与经理沟通,从而加速职业成长。

💡 **重新定义1v1会议:** 将1v1会议视为职业发展的机会,而非仅仅是状态更新。这包括讨论工作成果、遇到的挑战以及未来的职业目标,而不是仅仅汇报任务进展。

🎯 **职业生涯版本控制:** 即使尚未寻求晋升,也应尽早开始与经理讨论职业发展。这有助于明确方向、建立动力,并随着时间的推移持续改进。

🤝 **影响力的三个维度:** 围绕个人贡献、协作和赋能他人来塑造你的贡献。这有助于清晰地展示你的成长准备,并使经理更容易支持你的职业发展。

🤔 **让经理了解情况:** 1v1会议是突出持续性障碍和不明确期望的绝佳时机。通过分享遇到的问题,可以帮助经理提供不同的视角,并共同找到解决方案。

🛠️ **主动准备和参与:** 充分利用1v1会议,提前准备,分享成功经验、遇到的困难以及希望发展的方向。记住,经理无法解决他们不知道的问题,也无法支持你未曾分享的目标。

One-on-one meetings with your manager are one of the most valuable tools you have for career growth, problem-solving, and unlocking new opportunities. So if you’re only using them to provide status updates, you’re leaving a lot on the table.

I didn’t fully realize this potential until I mentioned in a one-on-one that I was interested in mentorship and growing my leadership skills. Not long after, I was asked to co-lead a project with an intern to build an internal tool that helped surface enterprise configuration details. This gave me the opportunity to take technical ownership on a project while mentoring someone in a real-world context—both of which pushed me outside my comfort zone in the best way. That experience made it clear: When used intentionally, one-on-ones can open doors you didn’t even know were there.

Many engineers treat one-on-ones as a low-stakes standup: reporting work, mentioning blockers, and getting general feedback. While that can be useful, it barely scratches the surface of what these meetings can accomplish. Instead, think of them as a system design review for your role—a time to debug challenges, optimize your workflow, and align on long-term career goals.

Reframing your perception of what a one-on-one can accomplish

A well-structured one-on-one meeting with your manager isn’t just a check-in, it’s an opportunity to shape your work environment and career trajectory. You wouldn’t build a system without evaluating its constraints, dependencies, and long-term maintainability. Why approach your career any differently?

Start by shifting your mindset: These meetings are not status updates. Your manager already sees your pull requests, sprint velocity, and planning docs. Instead, use this time to highlight what matters—what you’ve shipped, the value it’s delivered, and where the friction is.

You can also use this space to validate decisions and gather context. If you’re weighing different paths forward, don’t just ask for approval—frame the conversation in terms of trade-offs:

“Here are the pros and cons of refactoring this service now versus later. How does this align with our broader business goals?”

Treat your manager like a decision-making API: Feed in the relevant signals, surface what’s unclear, and work together on an informed response.

Use one-on-ones for career versioning (even before you’re “ready”)

One-on-one meetings are a great time to discuss your long-term career growth—even if you’re not actively seeking a promotion. Instead of waiting until promotion season, start having these conversations early to build clarity, direction, and momentum over time.

By treating growth as an iterative process rather than an all-or-nothing milestone, you can continuously improve and course-correct based on early feedback.

A useful framework for structuring these discussions is the Three Circles of Impact:

    Individual Contributions – The direct value of your work. Collaboration – How you work with and support others across the team. Enabling Others – Mentorship, knowledge sharing, or improving systems and tooling for your peers.

If you’re not sure how to show impact across all three, your one-on-one is a great place to explore it. The key is surfacing your goals early so your manager can help guide you toward the kinds of work that will stretch your skills and broaden your influence.

The more you shape your contributions around these areas, the clearer your readiness for growth becomes—and the easier it is for your manager to advocate on your behalf.

Your manager can’t debug what they don’t see

Managers don’t have full visibility into your day-to-day experience, so one-on-ones are the right time to highlight persistent blockers and unclear expectations.

For instance, I once brought up a latency issue I was chasing down. The endpoint’s performance was slightly above our service level objective (SLO) target, and I had already spent a good chunk of time optimizing it. But in that conversation, my manager offered a different lens:

“Are we optimizing for the right thing? We control the SLO. If the extra latency is due to how the system is designed (and if users aren’t impacted) maybe the right move is to revisit the threshold instead of squeezing more performance out of it.”

That single conversation saved me hours and helped me reframe the problem entirely. Sometimes, the fix isn’t in your code—it’s in how you’re measuring success.

Make your one-on-ones work for you

Your one-on-ones will become far more effective—and lead to real growth—when you treat them as time to think strategically, not just check in. Reframing these meetings around your goals, your environment, and your long-term development puts you in a much stronger position to advocate for yourself and your work.

Start thinking about your career progression earlier than feels natural. Come prepared. Bring in what’s going well, what’s stuck, and where you want to grow. And remember: your manager can’t fix what they don’t know about, and they can’t support your goals if you never share them.

If this shift feels unfamiliar, you’re not alone. The Engineer’s Survival Guide helped me reframe my thinking around one-on-ones.

Here are a few ideas that stuck with me:

The earlier you see one-on-ones as a tool for impact and growth, the more value you’ll get from them.

The post How engineers can use one-on-ones with their manager to accelerate career growth appeared first on The GitHub Blog.

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1v1会议 职业发展 工程师 沟通技巧
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