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Do you know these moments when you:

  • stopped laughing at Dilbert, because you realize its true
  • spent evenings completing a project that never went into production
  • when requirements are blurry but the schedule is not

There are so many factors that can frustrate developer and hinder him from being productive.

What factors do you experience at your current workplace?


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What Makes you lose motivation?

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43 Answers

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vote up 6 vote down

Ridiculous timescales: Recently we had a spec written on a Sunday that was to be delivered the next day. And I've just been given a week to implement a huge new feature that also requires 2 third-party companies to also do some work. The timescale cannot slip because there is a VERY important (government contract) customer demo at the end of the week. I suppose I should get on with it rather than posting on here, but I'm stuck waiting for the external guys to do something.

Oh, and salary levels... a year after becoming the lead developer on the company's biggest and most profitable product, I am still being paid at a Junior engineer level, despite a glowing appraisal (that should have been a pay-review) and many promises to "sort it out".

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What makes you lose motivation?

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vote up 20 vote down

Working for a big company for the first time after 20 years in small firms (giving away my age here), this bothers me:

Politics:

  • Decisions and planning done by non technical managers.
  • Decision ways are very long.
  • Management always talks about "just do it" and stops everything once you do exactly that.

Equipment:

  • Slow PCs that fit everybody and nobody (lowest possible standard for everybody)
  • Notebook with external screen with different resolutions
  • Old development tools (Java 1.4, Delphi 7, VS 6)

No roadmap. Programmer are treated as replacable resources.

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vote up 7 vote down

Incompetence of course! Worst of all, when it's mine incompetence. Yes, that's frustrating.

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vote up 12 vote down

Experienced programers on the team who don't bother researching or debugging a particular issue before they ask somebody else for help. I don't mind answering questions but don't waste my time with something that you should be able to figure out if you had taken more than 30 seconds to investigate.

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Tell them to "read the ....ing manual" :P – PintSizedCat Oct 10 '08 at 13:05
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vote up 3 vote down

Lack of motivation in my current work.

I'm always viewing things like StackOverflow and the such to take up time and tasks I'm given seem to take half the time they do other people. At the end of the day, when I'm on client site, it shows bad attitude towards work and not very much dedication towards the job etc.

Anyone know how to get more motivated really well, please, let me know as at the moment I'm considering if 'messages' have inherent meaning (Like Hofstadter proposes in "Godel, Escher, Bach", I believe he's wrong... but that's a Red Herring for another day).

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Coworkers who try to overstep their bounds. In particular team leads who think they should have a say over members of other teams, developers who think they need to determine how QA tests a product, and QA people who think they know better than the project managers when it comes to how the product should work.

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vote up 4 vote down

Managers who want precise schedules, when the tasks can't be accurately predicted.

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vote up 6 vote down

What bothers me, it's the people who work mainly with the mouth. Everything is always easier with the mouth...

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I find typing is slightly more difficult with the mouth. I have to be careful to keep drool out of my keyboard. – Adam Bellaire Oct 10 '08 at 18:47
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Downtime.

I know to a guy who digs ditches for a living, that sounds luxurious, but when you like the work, you want it.

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vote up 5 vote down

I'm in a big company. What frustrates me here is:

  • in the last second I usually receive the most important information, like: Oh no, this won't be a standalone application, it should be a Servlet
  • Everything is easy for the managers, so easy that neither a written specification is nor requirements are given
  • hacks and quirks survive every other code
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vote up 31 vote down

Micro-management by managers who don't understand software/web development, and think that you can allocate time for it like you can allocate time for tasks that actually have a known duration (e.g., painting a wall at Xm^2/hr, stamping sheet metal at X components/hr, etc).

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vote up 8 vote down

Messy offices!

I know this sounds petty, but IMHO it makes a huge difference as far as morale is concerned. I've worked in two offices now where my colleagues were massive coffee addicts, and as a result there are old coffee pads, cups, and other crap all over the place. Both times we ended up hiring cleaning ladies instead of just picking up after ourselves, which means that the office is then clean exactly once every two weeks.

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