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Jesse Landry

ELC and LinkedIn Stress-Test Engineering Orgs: NYC Roundtables

Production is outrunning structure. Teams are shipping faster, cycles are tighter, and what used to feel like a clean operating rhythm now carries drag. Some leaders are seeing lift. Others are seeing strain. Somewhere between more output and less clarity, the system starts showing its seams, and that pressure is not isolated. It is rippling across the startup ecosystem, where velocity is no longer the advantage on its own.

That tension sits underneath ELC NYC Roundtables on April 22, 2026. Not the tools. That conversation is closed. GitHub Copilot crossed 20M users. Claude Code moved through the market with speed that felt less like adoption and more like inevitability. Cursor reached $1B in annualized revenue before most teams recalibrated their workflows. Some teams are scaling output. Others are quietly realizing their operating models were never built for this kind of throughput. Greptile’s data shows code output up 76%. Pull requests are heavier. Review queues are louder. The system is absorbing more than it was designed to carry, and that imbalance is becoming a defining signal across the startup ecosystem.

So the room matters. LinkedIn’s New York office, third floor of the Empire State Building, 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM. No stage to hide behind. No panel to perform on. Just engineering leaders in a format that trades polish for precision. No presentations. No hierarchy. Conversations that feel unfinished in the right way. The kind that sharpen in real time. In a market saturated with surface-level insight, this kind of environment is becoming increasingly rare inside the startup ecosystem.

The gravity comes from who built the room. Funmi Oludaiye from Goldman Sachs. Alpha Bah from LinkedIn. Tim McElreath at Spring Health. Tom Eliaz building Bedrock Robotics after Twilio and Segment. Luxi Huang driving TuneCore across product and technology. Finance, social platforms, healthcare, robotics, music. Different lenses, same pressure. When that mix aligns, the conversation stops being theoretical and starts sounding like operators comparing notes in real time across the startup ecosystem.

Ownership is starting to blur because friction is lower and access is wider. Code review is under strain because volume is no longer human-paced. Knowledge is becoming leverage because writing is easy but understanding is not. Speed is everywhere. Intent is uneven. Some teams are moving faster. Others are moving faster without knowing if they are right.

This is where ELC NYC operates best. Not at the point of discovery, but at the point of consequence. The tools are already embedded. The question now is structural digestion. How teams reshape. How accountability holds. How leaders decide what not to accelerate.

It lands early in the year for a reason. The room is not there to admire progress. It is there to interrogate it. Because the gap between what teams can produce and what organizations can absorb is widening, and that gap does not stay open long.