active questions tagged team-building - Stack Overflowmost recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2010-03-18T02:28:02Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/team-buildinghttp://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/578359/hiring-a-programmer-looking-for-the-right-attitude29Hiring a programmer: looking for the "right attitude"Totophilhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/220882009-02-23T16:47:59Z2010-02-05T17:30:09Z
<p>It's actually two questions in one:</p>
<ul>
<li><p>What is the right attitude for a programmer?</p></li>
<li><p>How do you (or would you) look for one when interviewing or during hiring process?</p></li>
</ul>
<p>Please note this question is not about personality or traits of a candidate, it is about their attitude towards what they do for living. This is also not about reverse of programmers pet peeves.</p>
<p>The question has been made community wiki, since I am interested in a good answer rather than reputation. I disagree that the question is purely subjective and just a matter of opinion: clearly some attitudes make a better programmer than others. Consecutively, there might quite possibly exist an attitude that is common to the most of the better programmers.</p>
<p><hr /></p>
<p><strong>Update</strong>:</p>
<p>After some deliberation I came up with the following attitude measurement scales:</p>
<ul>
<li><p>identifies themselves with the job ↔ fully detached</p></li>
<li><p>perceives code as a collection of concepts ↔ sees code as a sequence of steps</p></li>
<li><p>thinks of creating software as an art ↔ takes 100% rational approach to design and development</p></li>
</ul>
<p>Answers that include some sort of a comment on the appropriateness of these scales are greatly appreciated.</p>
<p><hr /></p>
<p><a href="http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=attitude" rel="nofollow">Definition of "attitude"</a>: <em>a complex mental state involving beliefs and feelings and values and dispositions to act in certain ways; "he had the attitude that work was fun"</em> </p>
<p>The question came as a result of some reflection on the top voted <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/534624/how-do-you-ensure-code-quality/534672#534672">answer</a> to "<a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/534624/how-do-you-ensure-code-quality">How do you ensure code quality</a>?" here on Stack Overflow.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/110600/making-the-most-of-below-average-team-members31Making the most of below-average team membersedghttp://stackoverflow.com/users/42002008-09-21T09:11:59Z2010-01-11T17:38:02Z
<p>In an ideal world every software development team would be populated with PhD-level team members, all highly motivated and working in harmony.</p>
<p>But most businesses are not as well-funded and focused as, say, Google or Microsoft, and quite often a legacy of poor hiring practices means that a team of reasonable size (say 10 or more) will probably contain a few members that are distinctly average or below average.</p>
<p>I expect some will say "just fire them", but it's not usually that simple for reasons that are interesting but not immediately relevant to this question (mostly political).</p>
<p>Assuming that the team is bound to contain at least one or two of these below-average developers, what would you suggest is the best way to make the most of the situation?</p>
<p>EDIT: "50% of all programmers are below average"... not true! You could have 9 stars in a team and 1 donkey, but only the donkey would be below average.</p>
<p>EDIT: @Christophe Herreman makes an excellent distinction between below-average team members with potential and those without. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/110442/how-do-you-build-a-culture-of-collaboration-in-your-team22How do you build a culture of collaboration in your team?Vivek Kodirahttp://stackoverflow.com/users/164852008-09-21T07:05:11Z2010-01-06T16:27:26Z
<p>We've recently moved to using the wiki in our team. Earlier, we thought people couldn't contribute because it was difficult to. However, having a wiki (3 months now) hasn't helped as much as we'd hoped. Most folks still put it off as 'not my job'. How do I encourage my team to contribute to the wiki? </p>
<p>NOTE: One useful resource I found in this regard was <a href="http://www.wikipatterns.com/display/wikipatterns/Wikipatterns" rel="nofollow">wikipatterns</a>.</p>
<p>EDIT: In response to the first answer below, let me modify the requirements somewhat. The solution I am hoping to find must be:</p>
<ol>
<li>Positive</li>
<li>Self sustaining - it must not need continuous intervention.</li>
</ol>
<p>Just thinking out loud: stackoverflow itself is an example of such a system. Systems similar to Badges and Reputations could be adopted within teams as well. </p>
<p>EDIT: In response to the comment to this question. I'd take any kind really. We don't share information. Almost all domain knowledge is available only by consulting a select few.</p>
<p>Also, a note to all the people who've answered: Thank you :). Almost every answer has been useful. One that said we should reevaluate whether the team even had the time caused some introspection. Have requested management to actually allocate effort/time for documentation.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/323341/how-to-convince-my-boss-to-join-programmers-into-pairs-or-even-teams4How to convince my boss to join programmers into pairs or even teams?pbrodkahttp://stackoverflow.com/users/330932008-11-27T09:49:38Z2009-11-12T16:13:01Z
<p>Welcome
Our company has 4-6 programmers, each one working on 1-2 projects, and few more awaiting in schedule. Problem - from my point of view - is as long as I work here I work alone - so do all others. </p>
<p>I tried to talk with my boss that I want to work with others, exchange knowledge, learn from each other. He understand me, but also states that there is no big project to put more than one programmer into. There is possibility to have big project in nearly future, but first we must have those not yet started. Other problem is even if one of us finishes project, the other will be in the middle of his - so the first one will get another "small" project.</p>
<p>We started doing some internal trainings to share knowledge, but it's not the same as some challenging project did together with others. </p>
<p><strong>What should I point to my boss trying to convince him to try harder to form a programmers team?</strong></p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/541589/what-kind-of-team-building-activities-does-your-development-team-use2What kind of team-building activities does your development team use?Berek Bryanhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/396662009-02-12T14:52:16Z2009-10-11T01:47:14Z
<p>Having a good team that works well together is one of the most important things when developing software. If your team does not work well together the product will suffer.</p>
<p>What team-building activities can be used to help build and promote a better software team?</p>
<p>Personal experience would be great, but all suggestions welcome.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1531463/hiring-a-student-for-a-coding-project-looking-for-the-right-attitude2Hiring a student for a coding project: Looking for the right attitudeIronGoofyhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/253202009-10-07T12:54:29Z2009-10-11T01:45:39Z
<p>We have a university pretty close by and I'm thinking of trying to hire a student for a small and quite well defined coding project. </p>
<p>I know that there will be some drawbacks (level of education, experience and time), but I'm hoping to find someone who is not quite fully set in his/her way of doing things and also might give me a new idea or two.</p>
<p>What should I be looking for?</p>
<p>Note: I realize that there is <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/578359/hiring-a-programmer-looking-for-the-right-attitude">a more general question</a>, so I'm looking for ideas that are specific to my "hiring a student" idea. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1424402/building-a-team4Building A TeamZ with a Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/1668042009-09-14T23:29:34Z2009-09-15T00:35:24Z
<p>I'm trying to put a small team (about 5 members to start) together here in Honolulu to work on some hobby-projects members and myself may have, and am having trouble finding other members who are interested. Basically am just looking for people with skills in JavaScript, JQuery, AJAX, PHP, MYSQL, and anything else in that realm. I've posted to Craiglist and came across a professional graphic designer, so far. I myself am only knowledgeable of HTML/CSS/PS so we're a long way away from getting things going, in terms of projects I have in mind.</p>
<p>What would you guys suggest is a good way to build a team? Or more specifically, where or how would you go about finding potential interests? I've been at this over 2 weeks now and me and my design guy really want to get the ball rolling. </p>
<p>Maybe if you've done the same thing you can share your experiences as well, and maybe some tips.. that'd be greatly appreciated.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/112779/getting-developers-fired-up-about-development3Getting developers fired up about developmentSean Campbellhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/51362008-09-22T01:36:07Z2009-08-16T06:49:37Z
<p>I've recently started in a new team of classic ASP developers and part of my role is to re-train the team in ASP.NET 3.5 and C#. </p>
<p>To kick things off I've been running weekly training sessions on the fundamentals (as well as some sexier sessions on Linq & Ajax) and these have proven quite popular. However, despite a little dabbling, there seems to be a lot of resistence to getting stuck into the newer technlogies.</p>
<p>I'd like to know what other people do to fire up others around issues such as quality, technology and design.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/90726/how-do-you-do-team-building9How do you do team-building?Prakashhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/1232008-09-18T07:33:07Z2009-03-26T02:09:28Z
<p>Team building, in my opinion, is often misunderstood concept!
The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teambuilding" rel="nofollow">wikipedia definition</a> is also very theoretical.</p>
<p>But i think it is real critical skill for any team leader.</p>
<p>So, How do you "team-build"?</p>
<p>Do you just book some conference room in a big hotel and discuss the same things you do at your regular meetings?</p>
<p>Or you do you take your team to some place nice to have some fun group activity?</p>
<p>Or do you hire some professional speaker to give a great lecture?</p>
<p>What is your experience and what has <strong>worked</strong> for you??</p>
<p>Cheers</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/178484/how-can-we-get-people-to-participate-in-team-building6How can we get people to participate in team building?Danahttp://stackoverflow.com/users/30182008-10-07T13:43:10Z2008-11-28T06:35:37Z
<p>Ok fine, programmers aren't very social. There are a couple people on my team that rarely say a word to anyone else. They won't go to lunch with the rest of the team when we go out, regardless of who pays or where we go. My boss has offered to buy everyone drinks, and one of them went to that, but the other one wasn't interested. What's the best way to make everyone comfortable with team building? Maybe these people just aren't interested in getting to know the rest of the team. If that's the case, what's the best way to not make them feel singled out when they decline invitations to do stuff?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/122931/setting-up-an-architecture-department8Setting up an architecture departmentpointernilhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/167692008-09-23T18:42:31Z2008-11-22T21:21:31Z
<p>Some context upfront:</p>
<p>Imagine a 200+ developers company finally setting up a more or less independent architecture team/department.
The software portfolio consisting of 20+ "projects"/applications of varying sizes in production was taken care of by team-leads/technical-leads, who were responsible for and in charge of the projects "architecture" as well.</p>
<p>Out of the necessity to consolidate and control the architecture and enable certain needed large reworks on the systems as a whole, in addition of the all so needed knowledge exchange, the company decided to set-up an architecture department.</p>
<ul>
<li><p>What are the <strong>DO</strong>s and <strong>DON'T</strong>s of such an undertaking?</p></li>
<li><p>Who are the people making up such an architecture team?</p></li>
<li><p>What should be their responsibilities? </p></li>
<li><p>What's out of their scope? </p></li>
<li><p>What are the useful transition strategies for the company?</p></li>
<li><p>How to prevent those wry looks every time someone even mentions "the architecture team"?</p></li>
<li><p>Did your company undergo such a change already successfully?<br/>Why did it fail?<br/>Why was it successful?</p></li>
</ul>
<p>That's should <strong>not</strong> be a discussion on "What is architecutre?"(which is very closely related ;). </p>
<p>The really interesting points would be acceptable/realistic maybe even frictionless ways to install such a team, besides of course some warnings regarding battles better not to be even started.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/123957/who-is-responsible-for-your-ui-user-experience3Who is responsible for your UI / User Experience?David Krepshttp://stackoverflow.com/users/43912008-09-23T21:19:22Z2008-10-20T17:25:53Z
<p>Looking for input from all, though mostly interested in small engineering teams / small companies (10 - 20 people) that develop web applications:</p>
<ol>
<li><p>Who is responsible for the overall look and feel of your UI (i.e. setting standards)? Is this person a dedicated resource or does he / she have other responsibilities? What type of background does this person have?</p></li>
<li><p>What about the look / feel of individual features? The BA's that design the features? The engineers that implement them? A combination of both? Somebody completely separate (i.e. engineer codes core functionality and passes it on to somebody else to "pretty it up")?</p></li>
</ol>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/129551/what-has-your-qa-tester-team-said-or-done-for-the-development-team-that-made-your3What has your QA/tester team said or done for the development team that made your day (as a developer).not-bobhttp://stackoverflow.com/users/147702008-09-24T20:06:21Z2008-09-24T21:20:20Z
<p>There are lots of questions on how to improve communication between teams. One way to start is to identify what one team actually does that the other team really values and do more of that. </p>
<p>For example. Our QA team provided a VM for us with:</p>
<ul>
<li>The latest release of our server-based commercial software installed and configured (not an easy task in that an installation on-site takes at least 2 days)</li>
<li>A database backup of the configured system including sample data</li>
<li>an auto-install and configure application that mostly works. (with 12 install packages for the components needed, this is a big time saver)</li>
</ul>
<p>While we still do most of our testing on our own desktops, this allows us to have a relatively clean environment we can run locally.</p>
<p>What has your QA team done for you lately? Conversely, what have you done for your QA team?</p>