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Reminiscing on your career as an IT professional, what was the biggest lesson you learned?

[If you can accompany your answer with an story, anecdote, link to a website, article or book it would be great thing to inspire and teach the young IT professionals!]

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78 Answers

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vote up 22 vote down

Honesty is the key to any career/relationship.

I learned very early on that being brutally honest about your skills and experience was vital to my career advancement. Colleagues and management can smell doubt and fear as though it's the latest cologne.

  • If you're not sure, tell them you're not sure - but stress that you're itching to find out
  • If you're positive (or almost positive), be 1000% positive and aim to prove your method/suggestion/best practice - even if it means you're working 20 hour days for the next 6 months
  • If you were positive and now aren't sure, make sure you come out and admit defeat. Management won't care if you said you could, but couldn't early in a project or enterprise, however, come to them late in the game (when you've known for a few days) and you'll be doing tech support before you can say singleton.
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Making developers troubleshoot and fix their bugs (ok, only big production issues), regardless of time of day (i.e., usually at 3am), improves the quality of their software and changes the way they develop it.

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vote up 4 vote down

Never trust the data. Validate your inputs.

Anecdote: I spent two weeks looking for a bug in production code. After many a debugging session, I found out that one of the 12 data files I was working on was corrupted. I had checked all the other eleven files and I had checked the start of the 12th. Sure enough the end of the file was bogus. I lost two entire weeks when I could've found it in mere hours validating the data before sending it to processing (I got lazy, there was a lot of data to process and the 11.5 first files were good).

I was "lucky", it was a numeric simulation, not something security-sensitive or anything critical.

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vote up 1 vote down

Keep focus on what you intended to do. Once I created a form in a web-app where people had to enter their address. I started looking for a list of all possible cities in my country. After a while I found that such a list did not exists. Why not? I tried to find the answer to that question. It gave me insight in how names of places and cities are registered by the government......

..... And then I decided to just have a field on the form where people could enter the city of their address. I lost half a day searching for a list of cities I didn't need at all.

(I saw programmers spend weeks of time on functionality a customer never asked for.)

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vote up 20 vote down

Assumption is the mother of all screw-ups. Never, ever assume anything when it comes to circumstances in which defects are reported. Always check the obvious first, before looking for more esoteric causes.

When you hear "But I just assumed...", you know something has gone wrong.

Also, demand evidence. You need something objective (such as log files) to use for investigation. Going on user/integrator reporting is not enough. Human memories are known to be less than perfect; rely on what the machine generates.

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vote up 10 vote down

Don't get upset when bunch of error reports starts dropping in after the software is deployed. That means people are using it and they think it is good enough to spend time and energy to write error report.

Programming is 50% development, 50% fixing bugs. If you're good.

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vote up 4 vote down

Regardless of how smart are you, you can't do everything by yourself. Cooperation and 2+2=5 is the winning math.

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  • Never be satisfied with requirements from business. In fact, never be satisfied at all...until its done.Completely.

  • if you working in a large corporation, you shall regard Dilbert comics strips as a 'pictorial documentary' and the book The Joy of Work (by Scott Adams) as the Bible.

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vote up 26 vote down

I learnt that backups are your friend.

Twice.

:(

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I've worked mainly on the system administration side, having only just started out recently and my number one lesson has been "Never be afraid to make mistakes."

They happen, more often than most of us would like to admit and the key is to own up to them, learn from them and make sure you never make that particular one again.

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vote up 35 vote down

If you are running late, behind schedule or whatever with a problem that you are stuck on:

Ask for help sooner rather than later

The typical scenario is that you are coding away, something doesn't work but it seems trivial and you should be able to fix it yourself. You don't want to ask someone because that makes you look like an idiot so you frantically soldier on trying weird things, continually making the wrong choices and you end up in a total mess.

When you eventually ask for help, the first thing your helper says is " How on earth did you get into this mess?. Why didn't you simply ask someone?"

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vote up 8 vote down

Your hard drive can and will fail. It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when.

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vote up 6 vote down

Marketeers make a world of difference, there are very few good ones, but those are invaluable: it is only with a great team that you can make a great product.

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vote up 4 vote down

Utilize user usability testing! despite all internal testing, in the end we are all developers or at least familiar with the ideas and we do not look at the application the way the average user does.

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vote up 6 vote down

Software engineering is a very young industry.

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vote up 82 vote down

Never be afraid to say I don't know.

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Except when your boss asked you what progress you've made since he last saw you! – Ali Sep 22 '08 at 0:29
2  
My favorite answer in interviews! Works very nicely if you say it confidently. – Agnel Kurian Sep 22 '08 at 9:13
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vote up 16 vote down

Estimates are always off by at least 50% either way.

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vote up 43 vote down

Never stop learning.

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