I automated my job (and it made me a better leader)
Explore how my day as a senior leader looks now that I use 40 automations to help, and learn more about some of my favorites. The post I automated my job (and it made me a better leader) appeared first on The GitHub Blog .
Here’s the thing about senior leadership that nobody warns you about: the job isn’t hard because of any single task. It’s hard because your work lives in fifteen different places and your brain is the only system connecting them. Meetings bleed into each other. Decisions are made in threads without you. Someone mentioned your name in a planning meeting, and now there’s an action item living in a doc you’ve never seen. You’ll find out about it in two weeks when someone casually asks for an update. Fun. Last year, my team almost missed a performance review deadline because it was announced in a channel nobody was watching. One person spent ten minutes searching Slack and couldn’t find it. Another found the date in a random, unrelated channel. I ended up posting “I’ll admit we dropped the ball on following up in Slack, so that’s on me.” That’s the kind of thing that keeps happening when your brain is the only system connecting everything. I was spending so much energy on context-switching that I had nothing left for the thinking, connecting, and creating that my role actually requires (and that’s the work I actually like doing). But I started using automations in the GitHub Copilot app , and it changed my entire workflow. Bear with me. What automations actually are The GitHub Copilot app is a standalone desktop app for macOS, Windows, and Linux, built for working with agents, not just talking to them. You can run parallel sessions across repositories, each on its own branch and worktree. You can see what agents are doing in real time through canvases, which are bidirectional work surfaces where you and the agent operate on the same plan, terminal, or browser session. Progress is visible and steerable, not buried in chat history. Automations are scheduled prompts that run against your real work context: your calendar, your email, your messages, your GitHub repos. They connect through MCP servers and integrations, so they can see what’s happening across all the places yo
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