Launching a Second Product? Your Engineering Team Can't Build Both.
Why shared engineering resources guarantee that your new product track ships late — and what a purpose-built team changes. You've validated the first product. You have paying customers, a functioni...

Source: DEV Community
Why shared engineering resources guarantee that your new product track ships late — and what a purpose-built team changes. You've validated the first product. You have paying customers, a functioning team, and a roadmap your engineers know by heart. Now there's a second product. A new SaaS track. An AI suite. A platform for a vertical you weren't in before. Leadership is aligned, the market timing is right, and you need to ship. The question is: who builds it? The Borrowed Engineer Problem The first answer is always the same. You pull one or two engineers from the core team. Temporarily. Just to get the foundation down, scope the architecture, unblock the first sprint. They know the codebase, they know how you work, and they're available right now. Temporary rarely ends. Three months later, those engineers are context-switching between two codebases, two roadmaps, and two sets of stakeholder expectations. The core product slows down because they're unavailable for the work only they un