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There is a question "How do you make time to read a technical book?" There is some discussion on how much time their company allows them to apply to reading. This is a book not directly related to a specific project.

My question for non-consultants what guidance does your company have for charging time for reading technical books?

CLARIFICATION: This is not my question but one asked from a staff member. I have my own opinion about being a professional but I'm looking for what other companies allow. Also this is not meant as billable to an customer but was meant as chargeable to a company's training budget.

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I'd recommend you start with Hooked on Phonics and work your way up from there. – NSD Oct 19 at 1:04
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You are a professional, you should be reading on your own time. I remember an EE telling us that for the first year after he graduated he read for 3 hrs every night, 7 days a week, in order to get more knowledgeable. – James Black Oct 19 at 1:23
"This is not my question but one asked from a staff member." - a "friend", right? – duffymo Oct 19 at 2:03
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Duffymo - for someone with 24K in reputation, why post such a juvenile comment? – please delete me Oct 19 at 2:30
For someone whose command of basic written communication seems akin to that of an average 2nd grader, why accuse others of juvenility? – NSD Oct 19 at 2:49

closed as not programming related by Peter, Jim Ferrans, James Black, duffymo, ChssPly76 Oct 19 at 22:57

5 Answers

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not directly related to a specific project = not their problem.

Companies have to expect you will bill some time and do some research to solve a specific problem regardless of the source (google, stackoverflow, or a book), but general skills improvement is rarely something companies want to pay for. If they encourage that sort of thing, they'll tell you.

Edit In response to the OP clarification: I think the point still stands. Whether billing a customer or an employer, general skills improvement is rarely paid for. Attending conferences and reading books related to a project or at the behest of their manager are usually paid for.

That said, Companies that provide time and money for general skills improvement benefit from that investment. It breeds good will and, depending on how it is managed, breeds a well-informed development team. If this is your company, you need to decide if this is worth the investment going forward.

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Frankly, on moral and ethical grounds, I would never bill hours to a client for reading a book unless they specifically instructed me to. The consulting firm I work for has a training budget, but we make use of it on our own time. Because our firm is "technology agnostic," we would usually self-train before we started work for a client.

If I was already billing a client, I might buy a book and read it over a weekend, or go to a conference and take a couple days off at the client site.

Also, maybe this should be a wiki...

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It never would have occurred to me to even ask for that.

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In my experience if your conscience allows you to do so then do so, if you feel uncomfortable about it then you shouldn't - that motto works with other things as well :)

I think if the book is related to what you are working on then its fine to do that at work however as a very low priority task i.e. anything else related to project takes priority. There are many worse things one can do at work than reading a project related book.

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My company has put a freeze on training, so I am doing some self-study. I have read during work hours when it is directly related to something I'm working on, but I keep it to a minimum.

Unless a contractor was up front about not being knowledgable in a certain area and I wanted to hire them anyway, I would not pay someone to read on my time.

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