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From Blame to Belonging in Engineering Teams

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Manage episode 481239365 series 2833920
Content provided by Elevano. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Elevano or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Tech Trek, Amir Bormand talks with Jason Wells, Head of Engineering at BrowserBase, about building a high-performance culture rooted in trust, emotional intelligence, and psychological safety. Jason shares how his unconventional path—including a six-year break from tech—helped shape a management philosophy that puts human connection at the center of engineering leadership. From dismantling blame culture to fostering self-compassion and authentic feedback loops, Jason offers a powerful framework for anyone looking to lead modern tech teams more intentionally.

💬 Quote:

“The best engineering is done by people who love their jobs. If you want the best output, you need a culture that makes people feel safe, trusted, and empowered.” — Jason Wells

🔑 Key Takeaways:

Trust is the foundation: Jason outlines how “boldly daring to trust” creates psychological safety—key to collaboration, innovation, and long-term performance.

Blameless culture matters: Mistakes should be opportunities for learning, not shame. This leads to more ownership and less deflection in engineering teams.

Emotional intelligence is a multiplier: Jason shares how his six-year break from tech helped him level up his emotional toolkit—skills he now actively brings into management.

Every engineer is unique: One-size-fits-all management doesn’t work. Jason emphasizes individualized leadership rooted in curiosity, vulnerability, and compassion.

🕒 Timestamped Highlights:

00:00 – Intro & Jason’s background

02:43 – What makes a great engineering culture

04:40 – Why trust and psychological safety are non-negotiable

06:59 – How BrowserBase screens for cultural alignment

10:46 – Building an ideal environment from scratch

12:27 – Jason’s early start: Atari, Oracle, and startups

17:00 – Transition into management and leadership philosophy

20:00 – Leaving tech for six years: self-actualization and purpose

24:00 – Learning emotional intelligence and conflict resolution

28:19 – Creating safe space for engineers with high expectations

31:38 – Preventing burnout while maintaining performance

33:38 – Leadership means knowing your people

  continue reading

455 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 481239365 series 2833920
Content provided by Elevano. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Elevano or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode of The Tech Trek, Amir Bormand talks with Jason Wells, Head of Engineering at BrowserBase, about building a high-performance culture rooted in trust, emotional intelligence, and psychological safety. Jason shares how his unconventional path—including a six-year break from tech—helped shape a management philosophy that puts human connection at the center of engineering leadership. From dismantling blame culture to fostering self-compassion and authentic feedback loops, Jason offers a powerful framework for anyone looking to lead modern tech teams more intentionally.

💬 Quote:

“The best engineering is done by people who love their jobs. If you want the best output, you need a culture that makes people feel safe, trusted, and empowered.” — Jason Wells

🔑 Key Takeaways:

Trust is the foundation: Jason outlines how “boldly daring to trust” creates psychological safety—key to collaboration, innovation, and long-term performance.

Blameless culture matters: Mistakes should be opportunities for learning, not shame. This leads to more ownership and less deflection in engineering teams.

Emotional intelligence is a multiplier: Jason shares how his six-year break from tech helped him level up his emotional toolkit—skills he now actively brings into management.

Every engineer is unique: One-size-fits-all management doesn’t work. Jason emphasizes individualized leadership rooted in curiosity, vulnerability, and compassion.

🕒 Timestamped Highlights:

00:00 – Intro & Jason’s background

02:43 – What makes a great engineering culture

04:40 – Why trust and psychological safety are non-negotiable

06:59 – How BrowserBase screens for cultural alignment

10:46 – Building an ideal environment from scratch

12:27 – Jason’s early start: Atari, Oracle, and startups

17:00 – Transition into management and leadership philosophy

20:00 – Leaving tech for six years: self-actualization and purpose

24:00 – Learning emotional intelligence and conflict resolution

28:19 – Creating safe space for engineers with high expectations

31:38 – Preventing burnout while maintaining performance

33:38 – Leadership means knowing your people

  continue reading

455 episodes

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