Leading With "I Don't Know"
A powerful thing a tech lead can say isn't an answer. It's an honest admission — about your team's code, about AI's trajectory, about a world in crisis — followed by the only thing that matters: wh...

Source: DEV Community
A powerful thing a tech lead can say isn't an answer. It's an honest admission — about your team's code, about AI's trajectory, about a world in crisis — followed by the only thing that matters: what you do next. There's a version of tech leadership that never actually exists but haunts every leader anyway: the person who has seen every edge case, knows where the technology is heading, understands the macro forces shaping the business, and fields every question with calm, grounded certainty. It's a fiction. And quietly chasing it is one of the most corrosive things a leader can do. The real job — leading developers through ambiguous problems, positioning teams in the face of transformative technology, making business decisions while the world keeps breaking in unpredictable ways — requires a completely different posture. It starts with saying three words without flinching: I don't know. Why Leaders Resist Saying It The fear is understandable. You got the role because you were sharp. Yo