Ask HN: Senior engineering mngrs: how has AI changed your day-to-day work?

31 pointsposted 2 days ago
by kitetm

Item id: 46565262

7 Comments

deangiberson

8 hours ago

I have time to code up little tools for myself and my team. I can now automate simple things quickly to improve workflow, like gathering all the modified tickets in the past 24 hours and writing them out in our daily sprint document (it's the process they want so I go with it). Am I directly contributing to the critical path code, no, but I'm able to understand more quickly. I'm a Sr SDM and have been divorced from daily code for several year, now I'm able to get a broad view of things more quickly. Even just the act of finding dependent packages removes a little friction which means I'm less likely to let it become a road hump.

austin-cheney

2 days ago

Not at all. None.

I am in enterprise API management and gathering requirements from outside teams is the bottleneck, not writing the code. We have officially supported internal AI capabilities now and nobody is using it.

thomasben

2 days ago

It made me code again.

Before I had not enough time to gather context, be in the flow, code and test.

Now I work throughout the day, as soon as I have 10/15 minutes I send a prompt to one of my Claude Code so they can make progress on tasks that the teams cannot undertake because too time consuming versus business needs (major migration, architecture changes, etc…)

I love it to be able to contribute more

miguelbemartin

21 hours ago

I've heard this a few times already on Twitter, but wouldn't your time be better spent in other areas? even if it is 10 or 15 mins? I am having a hard time understanding this sentiment from SEM.

If it's something that anyone could do in just 10 minutes, it could be another simple task for the ICs working with you.

raw_anon_1111

10 hours ago

I have never in 30 years across 10 jobs ever seen it work well when a manager does production code instead of just POCs.

Either you’re going to suck as a manager and not get your team the resources they need, play the political games, etc or you’re going to suck as a developer because you can’t keep your commitments and can’t do the follow through.

Even worse, is a manager who is pushing vibe coded slop.

The best thing a manager can do if they still want to code is R&D level work that developers productize.

I am a staff consultant. If I’m leading a large project, I purposefully don’t commit any code and spend most of my time coordinating between other developers and “the business”. If I do work it’s again an isolated POC.

Raidion

2 days ago

Same. I can take on things that are nice, but not critical (yet) and make a ton of progress without bothering the devs.

davismwfl

2 days ago

GPT + Grok (sometimes Claude) for writing docs, policies, requirements, client responses etc. Grok is often times more concise/direct, which helps me as I tend to be verbose. I always review/edit regardless. Much faster than writing from scratch, and combining responses on the same topic is sometimes best.

Copilot for code completion + reviews or small snippets/functions but larger code/module generation has been weak so far.

Claude for full modules generation or complex multi-file edits.

Research: Grok (less filtered + better search), Claude (complex dev topics), GPT (balanced but sometimes slanted and/or seems to favor certain sources).

My Teams: Mostly Copilot for code completion/reviews, mix of GPT/Claude for code. Last year was loose/experimental to learn but we plan to formalize guidelines more this quarter.

Definitely a ton of hype that doesn't always match reality, but it is a super powerful tool that really has made things move faster.