Engineering Managers often let their coding skills atrophy because their calendars are consumed by 35+ hours of meetings per week. To stay technical, you must realize that maker time must be defended against the entropy of the "manager schedule."
This guide covers how to prune low-value syncs, align deep work with your energy peaks, and use async guardrails to protect your flow.
1. Audit the Context Tax
Executives spend 23 hours a week in meetings; Engineering Managers often hit 35+. This leaves no space for hands-on development.
The cost is not just the hour lost; it is the recovery time.
Research shows it takes over 23 minutes to regain concentration after an interruption. If your day is shredded into 30-minute gaps, you are not coding; you are just coping.
2. Prune the Calendar Rot
One proven strategy is aggressive pruning. Shopify deleted over 322,000 hours of recurring meetings to free up capacity.
The Lesson: Meetings must be intentional, not defaults.
If a recurring meeting lacks an agenda or a decision owner, delete it. Reclaim that time as a block, not a sliver.
3. Respect the Maker Schedule
Engineering work rarely fits into fragmented slots; it requires immersion. Paul Graham famously noted that "you can't write or program well in units of an hour."
A manager operates in 30-minute command blocks; a maker needs 2–4 hour deep dives.
If you try to code in the gaps between 1:1s, you will fail. Maker time must be defended as a distinct operating mode, separate from your management duties.
4. Schedule for Energy, Not Just Time
Don't just block time; place the hardest work during your personal peak.
Research on circadian rhythms shows that alertness varies significantly by time of day.
- Peak: Schedule design and coding here.
- Trough: Slot admin and email here.
- Rebound: Handle status checks here.
Aligning tasks to your biological energy improves accuracy and output.
5. Force Async Defaults
Use the GitLab "handbook-first" approach to remove the need for status syncs.
The Async Toolkit:
- Dashboards: Replace round-robin updates with live data.
- Written Updates: Force "read-ahead" context before any meeting occurs.
- AI Copilots: Use AI to summarize meetings you skip so you stay informed without attending.
6. Build Guardrails for Flow
Saying "no" to low-leverage pulls is an engineering constraint. Each extra ping raises your switch costs and degrades performance.
Preserve your context aggressively. Use "Do Not Disturb" modes during your maker blocks.
When you must stop, write a "restart note" - a quick sentence on exactly where you left off. This reduces the friction of starting again next time.
Closing Thoughts
Time reclaimed from meetings is time reinvested into building.
You will not find extra hours in the margins of your day. You have to carve them out of the center.
Maker time must be defended.
Do This Next: The Calendar Defense Checklist
Audit your schedule for next week against these four items.