A focused course, tailored for you
Developer Platform Engineer's Workload-Authority Playbook
How a software engineer at a developer platform anchors a workload when the platform tightens around managed-service consolidation.
When developer platforms tighten around managed-service consolidation, engineers without documented workload authority read as fungible. Engineers with it stay attached to the platform area.
$199 one-time
Tailored to your situation. Access within 24 hours. 30-day money-back.
Includes a hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access, generated for your specific situation.
Why this course
Developer platforms running managed-service consolidation cycles reorganise engineering benches in the same operating-model cycle. Engineers who continue running 'feature work' without a documented platform area they personally anchor are read by the deck as fungible. Engineers whose workload reads as authored stay attached through restructure.
The engineers who survive own a documented platform-area narrative under your byline, an architectural-decision record adjacent teams quote, and a quarterly workload-state artefact the engineering director adopts.
The course covers the three artefacts and the 90-day path to workload-authority framing. Plus a hand-built implementation playbook against your real platform area.
The 12 modules
Module 1. Reading managed-service consolidation for engineer implications
Managed-service consolidation at developer platforms reorganises engineering benches in three predictable phases: enterprise platform review, product-line review, and IC-portfolio review. The diagnostic decodes which signals (managed-service revenue contribution targets, infrastructure-cost compression, customer-tier reliability SLO benchmarks, AI-augmented developer-workflow benchmarks) indicate that the engineering bench is in the redraw set. Which engineers survive as fungible and which survive as platform-area anchors.
Module 2. Generic engineer vs workload-authority engineer
Two structurally different framings of the same engineer seat read very differently to the consolidation review. Generic engineer shows up as bench role with a feature-velocity number. Workload-authority engineer shows up as the leadership the platform area structurally depends on: documented platform-area narrative under your byline, ADR adjacent teams cite, and quarterly state artefact the engineering director adopts.
Module 3. Your documented platform-area narrative
Pick one platform area you currently anchor (source-control infrastructure, CI/CD platform, AI-developer-tools surface, container registry, security-scanning platform, developer-workflow integration). Write the narrative as a Senior-engineer-grade two-page document under your byline anchored to measurable platform metrics: developer-tier adoption, time-to-first-deploy, reliability metrics, cost-per-action, and downstream developer-productivity KPI contributions. Three structural templates.
Module 4. Architectural-decision record
An architectural-decision record (ADR) adjacent teams quote is the most defensible workload-authority artefact at developer-platform scale. The ADR covers context (developer constraint, regulatory overlay, scale target), considered options, decision (architectural pattern, technology selection, migration path), consequences, and rollback path. The packaging that makes ADRs cited by adjacent platform teams and the way to surface them as your authorship.
Module 5. Quarterly workload-state artefact for the engineering director
The quarterly artefact is a two-page state document covering platform-area momentum, developer-adoption trends, reliability outcomes, cost trajectory, downstream developer-productivity KPI contributions, and emerging risks. Cadence is end-of-quarter delivery to engineering director with copies to product, SRE, and adjacent platform team leads. Three worked examples from real developer-platform engineer workload portfolios at different consolidation stages.
Module 6. Working with product, SRE, and adjacent platform teams
Workload authority overlaps product (PM partnership, developer-tier KPI ownership), SRE (reliability operations, on-call response), and adjacent platform teams (data, observability, deployment, developer-success engineering). The collaboration pattern that strengthens defensibility: shared ADR adoption, joint reliability reviews, cross-team workload reviews credited by engineer name. Examples that elevated an engineer to Senior or Staff.
Module 7. Reliability, cost-per-action, and developer-productivity storytelling
Cost-per-action, reliability outcomes, and developer-productivity contribution are what finance and senior leadership read first in consolidation reviews. Format the cost-and-reliability story as a four-quarter trend with cost-per-action breakdown, reliability SLO performance, developer-productivity KPI attribution, and forward optimisation pipeline. Three storytelling templates and the talking points each gives the engineering director.
Module 8. Cross-workload leverage
Reusable engineering practices that scale across platform areas: ADR templates, integration-pattern libraries, reliability-runbook frameworks, observability instrumentation models, deployment-pipeline patterns. The leverage pattern that signals workload-authority engineering rather than vertical area coverage. How to convert delivered platform work into published practice the engineering director cites in consolidation defence.
Module 9. External presence: OSS, conferences, technical blog
External presence strengthens workload-authority positioning by establishing recognised authorship outside the firm. The publication and contribution cadence (OSS contributions to developer-tooling projects, conference talks at developer-tooling conferences, technical blog posts on the company engineering blog) that protects engineer seats through managed-service consolidation.
Module 10. Scope statement: Engineer vs Senior Engineer / Staff Engineer
Two overlapping seats with different scopes. Engineer scope covers workload delivery, ADR contribution, IP authorship at workload level. Senior Engineer scope adds multi-workload technical leadership and adjacent-team partnership. Staff Engineer scope adds cross-org technical strategy, architectural-decision ownership, and engineering-cabinet participation. The scope statement that puts you in the Staff track defensibly.
Module 11. Promotion mechanics inside developer platforms
Internal path from Engineer to Senior to Staff. The promotion artefact (workload narrative, ADR-adoption record, cross-team partnership outcomes, external presence) and the cycle calendar (mid-year review, year-end performance review, promo committee, announcement). What gets an engineer shortlisted, what blocks an engineer who is otherwise qualified, and how to time your move.
Module 12. Your 90-day move to workload-authority framing
Day-by-day plan with daily artefacts. Days 1-7: platform-area narrative scaffold drafted with metric inventory. Days 8-21: ADR v1 drafted with adjacent-team adoption confirmed. Days 22-45: quarterly artefact v1 delivered to engineering director. Days 46-60: multi-workload technical-leadership conversation. Days 61-90: Senior or Staff conversation scheduled with promo-committee sponsor identified in module 11.
How this addresses your situation
Specific modules that map to what you said you are dealing with.
Modules 1 and 2 cover the diagnostic.
Modules 3 to 5 produce the three artefacts.
Modules 6 to 9 cover cross-team cadence, productivity storytelling, leverage, and external presence.
Modules 10 to 12 cover scope, promotion, and 90-day execution.
FAQ
Will the engineering director actually quote my platform-area narrative?
Module 3 is built around the format directors quote.
What if my area is co-owned with another engineer?
Module 3 covers that case.
Why pay for this instead of reading free engineering content?
Free content covers technique.
Is Staff Engineer actually open?
Module 11 covers that diagnostic.
What is in the implementation playbook for me specifically?
A draft platform-area narrative; a draft ADR; a 90-day plan with conversations against your engineering director.