vote up 6 vote down star
1

There's a good chance this question will get closed, but I feel it's relevant to programmers.

A project that I've put a great deal of energy into was just significantly scaled back, to the point where it might as well not exist. There is a very good chance that the bulk of my work over the past two years will never see the light of day.

I know project cancellations are common in the software world and it's all but impossible to go through your career without experiencing them.

My question is: How do you maintain your motivation when something you've invested so much time and energy into evaporates within a matter of weeks, for reasons totally out of your control?

I love programming and now I feel like my heart's been broken. Will I ever love programming again?

flag
Well if time with the Wife/Girlfriend/Partner of your choosing doesn't work, there is always steady paychecks. – dverespey Oct 30 at 23:17
4  
It's not always about the money tho, is it? I imagine most of us geeks got into software dev becuase of our love of making stuff, not for the paychecks. – Jaimal Chohan Oct 30 at 23:28
@Jaimal Chohan - Yes, my thoughts exactly. Paychecks are great, but after my basic needs are met, the money begins to become less important than the work itself. Law of diminishing returns. – Runcible Oct 30 at 23:32
1  
Hardly unique to programming. Or even IT. – Dour High Arch Oct 30 at 23:33
2  
I hereby nominate this question for "best of the week" for the next podcast. – Ether Oct 31 at 0:47
show 1 more comment

9 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

Will I ever love programming again?

Yes. You will. Pick yourself up, learn from the experience and carry on.

Gall's Law:

A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked. The inverse proposition also appears to be true: A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be made to work. You have to start over, beginning with a working simple system.

This is what you should learn from this cancellation: If you couldn't ship something after two years of work, you were attempting to solve a problem that was too large without a preexisting foundation to build upon. When starting new projects, you must be ruthless in rejecting "requirements" that will add too much complexity to your product. Build the core, ship the core, then expand upon it, and ship that too. If you're not shipping, you're in danger of cancellation and uselessness.

link|flag
Incidentally, during interviews, when the interviewer inevitably asks, "Do you have any questions for me?" This is what I ask: "Will I be trusted with the responsibility to make decisions about product requirements that would interfere with my ability to ship?" If they say "No" to this, promptly thank them for their time, and walk away. – Bob Aman Oct 30 at 23:51
In our particular case, our project is leveraging a great deal of pre-existing work. But I agree with your central point: We didn't ship fast enough. – Runcible Oct 30 at 23:53
Well, just leveraging preexisting work isn't enough. It has to be preexisting work... that works. Sadly a rare beast. – Bob Aman Oct 30 at 23:55
Fair enough. Regardless, if we had gotten a working version of our product into the customers hands - even if it only had a subset of the features they requested - I think we'd be in a much better place today. – Runcible Oct 30 at 23:58
Undoubtedly, yes. – Bob Aman Oct 31 at 0:12
vote up 4 vote down
begin

if HaveEnoughMoney
{
   Go on holiday/sabbatical
}

Get a new job

end
link|flag
2  
Missing a loop? – Xepoch Oct 30 at 23:48
2  
Probably wrap a do { ... } while alive(); around that. – Ether Oct 31 at 0:48
That would be a sad loop. – Robert Oct 31 at 5:57
vote up 4 vote down

Get a DVD box set of The Wire, Season 1, and watch it end to end.

link|flag
Already watched it. Great series. Also quite relevant to this situation. Maybe I'll watch it again. – Runcible Oct 30 at 23:34
vote up 3 vote down

Like personal relationships, move on this too shall pass. Imagine now how much you have learned and how you will make your Second System.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Take the experience and apply it to another project. Take some of the money and apply it to a trip to Vegas.

link|flag
1  
I was going to suggest something along the lines of alcohol, but this is indeed more appropriate. – a paid nerd Oct 30 at 23:36
1  
Alcohol was implied by the Vegas reference (along with strippers cocaine, and police warrants) – Gurdas Nijor Oct 31 at 1:26
vote up 2 vote down

That same exact scenario has happened to me. My solution:

Find out if you're prohibited from applying the concepts that made the project you were working on so cool to another application (something that isn't direct competition).

If you're able to use it elsewhere, maintain a personal project that you find just as exciting. You may not be able to put as much time and effort into it...but it definitely provides some of the lost motivation.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I hate to say it, but sit in the middle of the room, close your eyes and meditate. Slowly chant to yourself "I get paid the same either way."

Then work on finding your next project, or your next job, as appropriate.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I'm trying something with a simple mantra "the version 1 of the project must be in customer hands after 2 months maximum". If the project fails, 1 or 2 months of code is lost, if the project partially success you just have to iterate until it is loved, if the project is loved just buy a bigger wallet... Maybe I'm wrong, I'm experimenting this :p

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

If at all possible, keep a copy of the code. If you have that much pride if what you've done, you'll want to be able to use it as a reference, somewhat like a portfolio.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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