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What is the difference in productivity between an average (median) programmer and the best 5-10% of programmers in your company?

(Are the better programmers twice as productive, or is the difference lesser or larger? I ask because the question popped up in a debate I was involved in a few weeks ago)

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This isn't really related to programing and there isn't any real answer to the 'question'. – Jonas B Sep 21 at 19:23
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I'm going to put this in the comments, since I'm too emotionally fragile to take any heavy downvoting right now. At many companies I've worked at (not necessarily my current one), the median programmers were worse than useless, forcing the best programmers to do extra work to cover for them. I used to fight to get the developers on my team who just did nothing all day - at least that way they weren't making messes that had to be cleaned up. – MusiGenesis Sep 21 at 19:27

closed as subjective and argumentative by MusiGenesis, Rich B, Welbog, Pesto, Brandon Sep 21 at 19:39

7 Answers

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In my experiecne, the "best" programmers aren't the ones who produce the most. They're the people who help make the entire team more productive.

Some developers can just break through stumbling blocks and make whole groups productive.

The "best" developers I've worked with tend to effect their entire teams producivity by some factor I'd guess to be near 1.5-2.5x. (It's unfortunately very difficult to measure - since you can't really know what the productivity would have been otherwise).

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+1 for "Magic Johnson programming". – MusiGenesis Sep 21 at 19:32
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It's been said that the best programmers are 10 times more productive than the average programmer. See Productivity Variations Among Software Developers and Teams.

But the difference between the average and best at any given company could be very different. Productivity doesn't mean the ability to type really fast or churn endless class hierarchies.

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+1 beat me to it by mere seconds... – klabranche Sep 21 at 19:28
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It is hard to measure productivity because:

  • Seemingly productive programmers may actually create work for themselves (creating bad software with lots of issues to solve later on)
  • Bad productivity may show up only years later when maintenance of a badly designed system becomes a nightmare
  • Writing good code takes time
  • Good programmers usually end up helping other not so good ones... (Which doesn't really help to boost their productivity in the sense of produced lines/hour)
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+1 for first point. They can also create extra work for the better programmers who will eventually catch and fix the mistakes. – Jon Seigel Sep 21 at 19:37
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I think productivity is one of those things that's particularly difficult to measure among programmers, for at least two (related) reasons:

  1. The programmer who comes up with the best designs may well take the longest to finish his/her work. This can create the illusion that the best programmer is less productive than some less skilled programmers.
  2. Good design generally lends itself to flexibility, which can result in a trade-off of sorts: less perceived productivity now, greater productivity down the road. This doesn't necessarily manifest itself to the advantage of the programmer responsible for the design, however: an able contractor, for example, might do a lot of the groundwork getting a project started, making life easier for programmers who come along later and reap the benefits, without it ever being obvious (at least to those on the outside) how "productive" the original programmer really was.
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On the team I work on (about 10 people), I think we are all 'strong' (relative to industry average), and still the best person is about 3x as 'productive' as the 'median' person.

(Marking as community wiki because merely anecdotal. But I think this is typical - ranges of 3x or 10x or infinity-X (when the median person is more hurtful than helpful) are I think not uncommon.)

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Your question contains a big flaw and I'd like to stress it but noting else.

Who are those guys, the "best" programmers? Picking any criterion seems wrong, because programming covers many different domains and the "norm" is a complex multi-argument function noone can define. At least, you did not in your question.

You may argue that, even without strong definition, one can always tell who's the best programmer in the company. Well, for our company I can't tell this. Programmers solve different tasks and hardly have a chance to compete with each other.

For my company the answer is thereby 0%. Whoever is the best by your unexpressed criterion makes the impression of a cool guy with his or her talents and skills unmesurable with COCOMO or anything alike and thereby incomparable to those of his or her peers.

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I think there's too many factors to give an actual number. Is the "best" programmer:

  • Someone who thinks carefully before designing and coding - so that the bugs encountered afterwards are trivial and there is minimal (or no) breaks in other people's code? That person probably doesn't write as many lines of code as others. He ends up costing less than others becuase one hour of time results in one hour new functionality and very little extra time to bugfix later.
  • Someone who documents code decently - I don't mean neurotically, but decently enough that you can quickly read some summary comments and decide whether or not you need to read further. Also, documentation of any tricks or tips in configuring a complex system. That person may not be fast, but their work will live on for many years after you paid them to do the work.
  • Someone who teaches others to be better programmers - maybe he doesn't write more, but everyone around him writes much better and even faster, because he teaches them (and he's not just a good teacher, but skilled in his area of expertise). Now it's not just his productivity that counts, but the productivity of those around him.
  • Someone who cranks code that works "good enough" - it's not bulletproof, but its fast and quickly demonstrates value. This the perfect person for some projects and a renegade loose cannon on others.

Personally, I'd take a mix of these people. I want the documentation guy, the careful guy, the teaching guy, and the get it done fast guy to all work together, and I want a leader guy around to decide who is best for what parts of the work. But not one of these types is the "most productive". But as a group, they may be the most productive team.

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