Scaling Engineering Teams Without Losing Velocity
Here is something that surprises almost every engineering manager the first time they live through it: growth slows you down before it speeds you up. You hire five more engineers. You expect output...

Source: DEV Community
Here is something that surprises almost every engineering manager the first time they live through it: growth slows you down before it speeds you up. You hire five more engineers. You expect output to increase proportionally. Instead, things get messier. PRs take longer to review. Standups run over. Someone built a feature that conflicts with something another team was working on. The planning process that worked for eight people completely breaks down at fifteen. Velocity, by most measures, actually drops. This is not a failure of hiring. It is a failure of org design. And it happens so reliably, at so many companies, that it has become one of the most predictable traps in engineering leadership. The good news is that it is largely avoidable if you think about the structural side of growth before you need it, rather than after things are already falling apart. That is what this article is about. Not headcount strategy in the abstract, but the practical mechanics of how teams grow: org