Engineering Our Future × Planning Engineered: A Different Kind of Engineering Skill
Most young professionals don’t struggle with understanding the work.
They struggle with keeping it organized, clear, and executable under real constraints—time pressure, shifting priorities, and constant digital interruption.
That gap is what Planning Engineered is built around.
While Engineering Our Future focuses on conversations with engineers and professionals shaping the industry, Planning Engineered focuses on something more operational: how engineers actually think, plan, and execute their work day-to-day.
Not theory. Not productivity hacks. Actual systems used in engineering practice along with my favorite analog tools.
What Planning Engineered is really about
Engineering work is already complex enough. Most of us don’t need more tools—we need better structure around how we use our attention.
Planning Engineered explores:
How engineering notes and project thinking are structured outside of software tools
How analog planning systems improve clarity in technical decision-making
How to reduce cognitive load in environments full of interruptions
How focus constraints can be turned into structured workflows instead of friction points
The goal is simple: better thinking leads to better engineering output.
A few videos worth watching first
These are good entry points if you want to understand how the system comes together:
Why this matters for engineers early in their careers
Most engineers are trained heavily on technical execution—calculations, codes, design procedures.
Very few are trained on:
how to organize thought under load
how to manage multiple technical threads at once
how to maintain clarity when everything is urgent
That gap is often what separates technically capable engineers from consistently effective ones.
Planning Engineered is an attempt to build that missing layer.
How this connects back to Engineering Our Future
Engineering Our Future captures what the best in the field are doing.
Planning Engineered is about building the internal systems that allow you to actually operate at that level.
One is external perspective.
The other is internal execution.
If this resonates, subscribe to the Planning Engineered YouTube channel. That’s where the full breakdowns live.
And over time, you’ll also start seeing more of this “thinking on paper” approach show up directly in this newsletter—especially where it connects to how engineers can better structure their work, attention, and decision-making in practice.

