Ways of Working

Respect, Inclusion & Belonging

Foundational

We do our best work when everyone on the team feels respected, safe to speak, and able to take part as themselves. That does not happen by itself. We build it through how we treat each other every day. Assume good intent, make space for every voice, and never let someone's background, identity, or experience level be a reason to dismiss them.

An inclusive team is not just kinder; it is more effective. Different perspectives catch more problems, and people who feel safe raise concerns, admit mistakes, and challenge bad ideas — all things this handbook depends on. Psychological safety is the sense that you will not be punished for speaking up or being wrong. It is the foundation under honest feedback, blameless failure, and speaking up.

For a team with many junior engineers and varied backgrounds, this matters twice as much. People need to feel safe asking "basic" questions and disagreeing with seniors. Respect is the baseline. Inclusion means making sure everyone can actually take part.

Treat each other well

Build belonging

Self-review checklist

Why it matters: Respect and inclusion are not soft extras. They create the psychological safety that honest feedback, blameless failure, and speaking up all rely on. A team where everyone feels safe to take part catches more problems, learns faster, and keeps its people. A team where people feel dismissed or unsafe loses both ideas and talent.