vote up 4 vote down star

I recalled Joel saying that, he tried to hire a new programmer for every USD 10,000 of recurring monthly revenue. For e.g. if on January, you get USD 10,000, and by April, you get USD 20,000 every month consistently, it's time for a new programmer. I read it in this article.

I relied on a rule of thumb that we could add another full-time employee each time we produced an additional USD 10,000 a month in revenue

But seriously, what's your rules of thumb to help determine this magic number?

flag
Real world problems are to be solved by an individual human facing it, there is no standard rules of how business works, otherwise why will somebody do consultancy at all, if there are books on the shelve to run your business. – Akash Kava Aug 28 at 9:35
1  
Here's the article with the quote you read: inc.com/magazine/20090901/… – ire_and_curses Aug 28 at 9:35
5  
The title of this question makes me think of lightbulb jokes :-) – Alterlife Aug 28 at 9:44
1  
None. It's a hardware problem. – ChetHong Lau Aug 28 at 9:50
Programmer related, but not programming related. – dmckee Aug 29 at 4:58

closed as not programming related by Bombe, Binary Worrier, Neil Butterworth, dmckee, sth Aug 29 at 11:47

11 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

It depends on the

  1. Type of project for which the hiring is made

  2. Project deadline

  3. How good your other programmers are

Edit:

As suggested by @silky

link|flag
2  
3. How good your other programmers are :P – silky Aug 28 at 9:24
Included your comment in my answer. Hope you don't mind. – adamantium Aug 28 at 9:29
2  
4. how much your programmers cost :P . – Alterlife Aug 28 at 9:31
1  
4. How big the project is... – Thomas Levesque Aug 28 at 9:33
vote up 0 vote down

Dependent upon a great many things. That's a rather arbitrary question.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I don't know if there is an easy formula to answer this question (a thumb rule so to say) but I can certainly tell you that "Too many cooks spoil the broth". Adding programmers late in the software development life cycle is going to hurt more than it helps (read "The mythical man month" by Fred Brooks). Hence in my opinion this number is best decided when you have made the effort estimate for your project once the requirements have been frozen. And of-course you need to revisit this figure if your requirements change.

link|flag
agree on that, just to add: if you DON'T want some project to succee, engage more than 6 people in team ... – as Aug 28 at 9:34
vote up 18 vote down

Rather than hiring programmers based on turnover, it seems more sensible to hire them based on effort required.

link|flag
1  
it is easy to estimate the number of programmers needed based on effort required for a project (generally speaking), but in my case, I'm estimating for my company, with multiple projects/product running at different time thru-out a year. So a general estimate may make more sense. – ChetHong Lau Aug 28 at 9:42
vote up 3 vote down

10K per what? Not per year since a developer will cost more than that. Certainly not for every 10K you make.

If that were the figure, it would have to be per month since that would be pulling in 120K a year which should hopefully offset the cost of a new developer.

Me, I wouldn't use any formula like that. I'd figure out the amount of work coming up and compare it to the amount of people hours I have available.

If I didn't have enough, I'd hire.

You don't run a business by hiring people just because you've got money lying around. A new hire has to generate more money than they cost. Otherwise you're wasting money.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I don't think there's a magic number. You should hire as many as you estimate you need to:

  1. Keep your software usable and current if it's in maintenance mode,
  2. Keep your software on schedule and under budget if it's in development mode.

Fewer is better.

Ofcourse if you're talking about a 'body-shopping' firm working out of a third world country a formula such as the one you propose might work...

link|flag
I agree that the idea of no. of programmers being directly proportional to the turnover seems like something that would only hold true up unto a point. There are many situations I can think of where I'd rather have fewer programmers. I recall Joel saying that one should hire only when you're absolutely sure you need to (vs. pre-empting the requirement) – Tom Duckering Aug 28 at 10:42
vote up 1 vote down

This of course depends on who your programmers are. The Mythical Man Month sums it up best.

alt text

link|flag
What's up with the bears? Mythical bear-month? They seem to be up to something in this picture... – Seb Nilsson Aug 28 at 12:51
@Seb Tar pit reference iirc. – Tom Duckering Aug 28 at 13:51
vote up 0 vote down

Hire as many good ones as you can before management makes you outsource...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Very simple ... You hire a new person as soon as that new person contributes more to the revenue than he costs. In such way the comany makes a net profit. Only thing to be mindful of is measuring the costs and benefits, some of them are intangible.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

1 woman makes 1 baby in 9 months. 9 women make 1 baby in 9 months.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

You have misread the quote you cited. It says that you could add a new programmer per 10k monthly revenue, not that you should. He's stating an upper bound (i.e., "each programmer you hire will cost about $10k/month to have around" - considering salary, payroll taxes, insurance, floorspace, equipment, etc., that sounds about right to me). He is not claiming that one programmer per 10k revenue is in any way optimal.

The answer to your actual question, though, is "as many as you need to get the job done in a timely fashion, and very few, if any, beyond that".

link|flag

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.