What are some of the day to day things you do in your dev team that help build your team's morale?
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Bar. Beer. Once a week. First 2 brewskis are free. After hours, of course. |
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Would have to disagree with one of the previous answers - do not make the team your friends. The team needs an authority they could look up to. A friend is an equal. It's very easy for a nice person to become everyone's best fried - but the team will lose a leader. Keep your distance. |
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1) Be human: encourage - and work to build - trust 2) Demand debate: promote constructive conflict and drive out the natural fear of conflict 3) Force clarity and closure: so drive individual and collective commitment 4) Confront difficult issues and encourage others to do so: promote accountability 5) Focus on outcomes: have everyone pay attention to results |
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Know the people on your team and take an interest in them: Something like "How was Josh's softball game this weekend?" will do way more to improve the morale than a "Hi buddy, nice to see ya! Catch ya later!" Provide (private) feedback, both good and bad. (see Manager Tools feedback podcast) "Mike, when you dismissed Jane's idea out of hand without letting her finish, it makes her shut down, and she won't want to bring up potentially good ideas in the future. What can you do different so it won't happen?" "Thanks Mike" "Robert, good catch when you pointed out that the foobart might cause the girgle to spew". "Tom, thank you for starting a new pot of coffee this morning." Above all, don't expect change to happen overnight. |
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I highly recommend this book: How to win friends and influence people. It helps with dealing with people - especially co-workers. Enjoy! |
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Any/all of the above, plus maybe you could look at some of the agile practices. Depending on your circumstances some of the following may be worth trying: How about working to small achievable iterations, so that the team don't feel swamped? How about (if there's a convenient wall) a Big Visible Chart or two so they can really see things getting checked off? How about getting them into close communication with users, so they can understand how their work will be used? How about not starting another sentence with "how about"? What equipment does the team have? Could you improve it? Particularly monitors - bigger and more of 'em. Developers (good ones, anyway) love more pixels. |
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Spend half an hour a week one-on-one with each member of the team. See http://www.manager-tools.com/manager-tools-basics/ for lots of details. |
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Free soda. Core hours that allow flexible schedules. (ie: set core hours from 9 to 4 - some can come in at 7 and leave at 4, some can come in at 9 and leave at 6) Agile w/ one week iterations and project managers that know the process Frictionlessness <- muy importante Fast computers Big monitors Opportunities to mentor and to be mentored I think Niyaz' suggestions are no good. These ideas should be level zero for professionalism and has nothing to do, specifically, with a development team. |
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G'day, I'd edit and extend Niyaz's list to add.
Hollow, "let's be buddies" type gestures are a total waste of time if not backed up with real efforts to support your team members. HTH. cheers, Rob |
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Since we started daily lunchtime "teambuilding exercises" (the entire team plays Team Fortress 2) our morale, productivity, and teamwork has increased dramatically. Seriously! |
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Check out the "One Minute Manager" by Ken Blanchard. It applies to any form of management but I think it's particularly appropriate to software development. In no particular order: 1 minute praising 1 minute reprimands 1 minute goal setting |
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Everyone on the team needs to feel like they are an important piece of the team. I know everyone is "rewarded" with a paycheck, but I think it needs to go deeper than that. A rewards system doesn't have to cost a lot of money. It can be anything from a simple "thank you" to lunch to a company shirt. If the reward is not money, then it it truly is a case where it's the thought that counts. The big contributors need to be recognized first, but they shouldn't get all the praise. Even the new guy or the low man on the totem pole should be praised once in a while. If the person isn't good enough to be rewarded for their work, then why are they on the team in the first place? |
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I like to tell my developers this: |
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Ensure that everyone in the team has respect for each other's abilities. A single precious, elitist, I'm-always-right coder (and we all know that there's plenty of them out there) can push down the morale of the entire team. The dev job is a pretty flexible one, and you can see the output pretty clearly. Software development is well suited to flexible hours and working from home. You have a balancing act (a totally distributed team rarely feels like a team at all) but the additional freedom is a big morale boost. Finally, from motivational theory, just about the biggest motivator for anyone (well, anyone already earning a good living) is a feeling of importance. Make sure devs feel like their contribution is not only important but essential. Nothing demoralises like the opposite: ignoring their opinion or devaluing their input. |
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Buy them fish and chips/pizza/chinese once in a while. Go for a pub lunch and pick up the tab. It does wonders for morale. It's better if eaten away from the computers. |
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I agree with everything Niyaz has said and would like to emphasize point 4... Give credit. Tell your work mates that they have done a great/impressive/excellent/brilliant job and that your impressed. |
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I think that collective code ownership is important and give the perception that work done is appreciated and that the team is making a difference. When things go wrong try and cut out resentment by doing group post mortems. A daily stand-up can prevent things going wrong and developers going dark. |
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Have lunch together. Every day (well, almost). Really, it works. |
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1) Smile always 2) Say thank you 3) Always help 4) Give credit 5) Make them your friends 6) Do something other than your regular work together |
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