Strategy vs. Execution: How Leaders Set Technical Vision
There is a version of technical leadership that looks like this: you are deep in a sprint, your team is shipping, the product roadmap is clear, and everyone knows what they are building. Everything...

Source: DEV Community
There is a version of technical leadership that looks like this: you are deep in a sprint, your team is shipping, the product roadmap is clear, and everyone knows what they are building. Everything is humming. You feel productive. You feel useful. And then six months later you look up and realise you have been executing against a direction that no longer makes sense. The architectural decisions made eighteen months ago are now actively fighting the product requirements coming in today. The platform you are running on does not support the scale you need. The technical debt you kept deferring is now the reason your velocity has halved. This is what happens when execution runs ahead of strategy. And in my experience, it is one of the most common failure modes in technical leadership, because the short-term feedback loop for execution is so much tighter and more satisfying than the long-term feedback loop for strategy. Execution tells you immediately whether it worked. Strategy takes month