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Programmers as a group have a not exactly ill-deserved reputation for thinking little of others work/opinions and thinking a great deal of our own. I know that, I see it in myself all the time, and I consciously let such things slide on that basis when I see them.

But...

I'm in the unfortunate position where I'm working in an environment with dozens of things I strongly disagree with*, not one or two. Further, because I'm a relatively new hire and 10+ years junior to my colleagues who've created their working environment over 20+ years (inbred? oh yes) I'm making zero headway getting my point across. The stock answer being "it's fine" or "this is how we do things here".

So my question is: what can you do to try and change such entrenchment?

Should you talk to management if no-one is listening? Should you try and make big statements or subtle pushes? And when should you give up?


* A few examples (but only a few, I'm trying not to be whiny) because I know you'll want 'em

  • There isn't a project manager in the company, nor even rudimentary PM software
  • There's no bug tracking software
  • Software testing is "reputation based", involves excel and a few hours of the phone staff time
  • Future plans include replacing IIS and ASP.NET sites with apache and C dll's


Quick Edit: I'm not insane people, I am looking for other work, but everyone knows what the world's like right now, so I'm trying to approach this in a "make the best of things" way. I'm also concerned about how my reasons for leaving are going to sound in my next interview.

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Just curious: what type of company are you working at? What country? – Dmitri Nesteruk Dec 15 '08 at 22:32
I can't answer the first question other than to say it's a tech company (that's to say tech is the business), but I'm in the UK – annakata Dec 15 '08 at 22:37
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If I didn't know better, I'd say you lived in Portland, working for my former employer... ;) – Troy Howard Dec 23 '08 at 19:25
this has wierdly bounced back to the frontpage, so I'll add a litle addendum that my situation is much deteriorated :P - oh how I wish SO had a hiring board sometimes – annakata Jan 27 at 13:13
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With apache: nothing. With C dll's to drive a web-app, I would hope that would be self evident but in case it isn't, by way of analogy what's wrong with taking a helicopter to get the newspaper each morning? – annakata Jul 21 at 18:35
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13 Answers

vote up 27 vote down check
  1. Find an ally.
  2. Start small.
  3. Don't feel bad about setting up 'skunkworks' development software like PM/tracking systems.
  4. It shouldn't take long for your group to become known as "those guys who have low bug rates/ know what they're doing"

If you are really the sole voice, this company might not be for you.

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tech team of 7 people, I really am the only one, but maybe I can recruit – annakata Dec 15 '08 at 22:24
Agreeing with Jimmy here - if you don't want to leave, that is... – Marty Dec 15 '08 at 22:37
at the moment I believe this to be the best response generally, but I'd still like to hear answers about talking to management and when to accept defeat – annakata Dec 16 '08 at 9:12
I like this and what Paul says - picking battles is key, and don't find at every opportunity. And good luck, either way. – peacedog Jan 7 at 12:47
I agree, influence by your character/ethic and results - it's a hard fight but if you think its worth it and you pull it off - you will change a lot of minds. – BPAndrew Feb 3 at 17:09
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You should leave. I know the economy is in the tank and all that kind of jazz, but there are just too many things going wrong in this environment. From your position of limited power you just can't expect to fix the firm. Job moves are usually good. I've made a mistake or two in employment choices during my 14 years, but usually things have gotten better through moves, not worse.

Find a good company to join. Don't fix the one you are in.

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+1, why was this voted down? – Paul Dec 15 '08 at 22:28
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If they haven't even started using bug tracking software in 2008, I'd consider the effort required to bring people up to speed to be too great. At this point, it's worth covering yourself: the more time you spend there, the more dated your skillset becomes. – Greg D Dec 15 '08 at 22:50
-1, The OP is asking for specific techniques to help him in the situation he CURRENTLY IS IN. Getting him to leave may help his career in the long run, but it doesn't address the question at all. Leaving may not be an option, and there's value in developing the skills to affect change like this. – BQ Dec 15 '08 at 23:06
Leaving is passive agressive, especially if the desired outcome is to change the situation in the current position. He should first seek to change his environment through official and/or unofficial means before resorting to leaving. This never solves anything. – Anderson Imes Dec 15 '08 at 23:08
Passive agressive? Surely you jest. You must be trying to use an old buzz phrase or something. If you have stumbled into the wrong employment situation, the correct action to take is to find a good employment situation. 'Nuff said. – David Leon Dec 15 '08 at 23:43
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You're definitely in a difficult position, because it's difficult to make strong statements about how you think things should be done without offending the people who've set things up the way they are. (Even if it is really dumb and you disagree with it.)

Honestly, since they are all quite senior to you, you're going to be working uphill to convince them to see things from your point of view. That doesn't mean that you shouldn't try, though! The best thing you can do, really, would be to make a comment to a project manager to the effect of, "I have a concern about the way that this is being done, and this is why..." If you lay out your concerns with strong backing evidence (so that it doesn't appear to just be personal preference), then you've done about all you can.

Unfortunately, if it falls on deaf ears, you're kind of stuck. You can try and subtly influence things "in the trenches", though.

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in my specific case I have no PM's of course, but the point stands generally – annakata Dec 15 '08 at 22:23
vote up 6 vote down

Last time I was in that position, I carefully prepared arguments, and set them forth in the most professional manner I could. By the time I had managed to leave the company, I figured I'd had zero influence. I don't know how to manage your situation, but I know I wasn't successful.

If you get a chance to work for a company that's better run, take it.

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vote up 1 vote down

Sounds like you're answering your own question. Leaving at the moment might not be a good idea, but it never hurts to keep an eye open for a better oportunity.

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vote up 19 vote down

Two big things:

  • Pick your battles.
  • Manage by fact.

The first one is very simple: even if there are lots of things that need to be fixed, pick a very small number (1, 2 or 3) of simple, fixable problems and concentrate on fixing those problems first. If you spread yourself too thin you won't get anywhere. If you spend all your time fighting, you'll never fix anything. Pick carefully, since with each little fight you win, you gain the ability to tackle larger and larger issues, but with each loss you lose your reputation.

The next is to stick to the facts. The worse thing a techie can do it to resort to games or politics. When you're dealing with issues, it's best to get all of the facts, verify them, and then stick to them. No emotions, no intuition, no politics. If you want to put the strength behind what you say, then you have to be above personal attacks, which means that you have to have a rep for sticking to the facts and getting them right. If you're bluffing, or guessing then it will eventually come out, and you'll lose all of your credibility.

Sometimes it takes a while, but if you're patient and consistent, over time you can gradually fix a huge number of different issues in your workplace.

Paul.

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In my own experience, surprisingly few people respond to facts. Responses like the ones described in the question imply an emotional incentive to keep the software group in stasis. – Greg D Dec 15 '08 at 22:55
I'm trying to keep the question general, but in my specific case there is a palpable aura of obstruction and negativity as GregD senses. I feel the company needs serious new blood, but there's a lot of self-interest here. – annakata Dec 15 '08 at 23:03
People can't argue with facts, so if you don't make it personal they have no reason to dig in. If they're not responding, it probably because your not really presenting facts or you're giving them some other reason to disagree. – Paul W Homer Dec 15 '08 at 23:09
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I think you're being considerably over optimistic about human psychology - facts have never been a problem for politicians or priests so far. Homer Simpson: "Pfft! oh sure, you can prove anything with facts..." – annakata Dec 16 '08 at 8:49
Yes, but only because they've lost their reputation and you no longer trust them. Think carefully, is there someone you know, whom always tells you the truth, so that if they lied you'd never know it? That's how you want other people to see you, that way they'll listen (without making it personal). – Paul W Homer Dec 16 '08 at 15:28
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vote up 15 vote down

Try looking at it from the other perspective. To them you are:

  1. The stereotypical "new guy" with less than half thier "career experience" and "none" of thier "business experience" with that company.

  2. You want to completely change a "working system architecture" without concern for the business or technical considerations that created it.

Try to keep in mind, "they know a lot more about the system than you do." Approach them from that perspective, and try to understand what business or technical situations led to the current system.

Just the fact that you bother to ask and listen to them give you the history will make them more open to your suggestions.

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totally right. for an (in his eyes) successful professional, you're arguing no more than a bunch of buzzwords. – Javier Dec 15 '08 at 22:52
good points, thanks – annakata Dec 15 '08 at 23:04
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Ghandi said "You must be the change you want to see in the world." That means you need to introduce into your own work every good habit that you would like to see in other people's work. For example, set up a bug tracking database for your own personal use, and continue to use it at all times. Tell people how much it helps you and encourage them to start using it too. Slowly but surely, the viral spread of your good habits will make the company a better place to work.

Oh, and don't forget to keep checking the job pages... :)

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vote up 2 vote down

I'm a big fan of repairing things but this sounds cheaper to replace than repair.

replace == job change.

PS: I bet no source control either, right?

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In fact they have no less than 4 different source control systems in place, and one of my other complaints is that I'm required to get latest on the entire source tree before I build anything, and I'm not allowed to integrate with VS. It would almost be better if there was no source control. – annakata Dec 16 '08 at 8:52
wow... that sucks.. – Andrei Rinea Jan 7 at 22:59
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o0 wow that's crazy – jcollum Jan 28 at 0:22
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Let’s try to take a slightly different viewpoint on the whole situation. The things you’re seem to be unhappy about generally fall under the category of production technology, i.e. best-practises, procedures, tools and methods used to make and deliver product or service.

The production technology is as important as the product technology itself. Companies that do not use up to date or improve their production technology eventually go out of business. This is that the “dynamic company” part of most job adverts tries to refer to.

A good example is the way Ford has improved car production technology by introducing a conveyor. It was very controversial move at the time and many people, including many who worked for him, were strongly opposed to it. But eventually mass car producers that did not adopt the conveyor went out of business since they were unable to match quality, speed and cheapness of Ford production.

In good old days before the industrial revolution the production technology didn’t evolve that rapidly. It changed bit by bit over centuries, nowadays in engineering and especially in software engineering the production technology evolves noticeably faster. Probably not as fast as the product technology, but its fair to say that tools and methods constantly change and these changes summed up over five years present a significant evolutionary step. Companies that fail to keep up go out of business.

Hence, it’s part of the managerial responsibility to catalyse and facilitate this change, encourage people to constantly and actively advance the production technology, make it one of the priorities. I assume that you do not hold a senior enough position within the organisation to force the change (i.e. other developers do not report to you). But even if you were, making an already static team to start moving would be uneasy task.

Thus I suggest the following:

DO’s:

  • Move on to a company where management is doing its job. It can prove difficult to find such software company that will simultaneously be on the forefront of technology, be interested in you and match your personal circumstances; as a result some people would have to start their own.

  • If a technology can be applied on an individual level just do it. If you then told to do things in an inferior way — move on. Unfortunally, most contemporary production technologies either can only be utilised collectively or they are company and its product specific and need to be developed collectively by the whole of the production team.

  • In the case of collective technology try to built a strategic alliance with someone within or outside the team. See who can be helped greatly by the technology (fulfil an opportunity) or harmed (currently under threat) unless they use it. Obviously they need to be fully aware of the opportunity or the threat; it doesn’t matter if the opportunity of threat is the same for both of you.

  • Be realistic about the amount of change you can introduce at any given stage.

  • Find someone knowledgeable perhaps outside the organisation to discuss and plan the specific changes you hope to introduce (general advice like you get in the responses to this question might be fairly useless when it comes to planning concrete steps of, let’s say, introducing a formalised testing). An online forum could be helpful if you do not happen to have same minded friends living locally.

  • When planning a change try to brainstorm why it could fail: Ishikawa diagrams is one way to organise the brainstorming session, the other is to try design the thing to fail. Whilst you can Google the former, the latter needs an illustration. Let’s say you want to introduce issue tracking, then how would you prevent everyone from using it even if they wanted badly?

    • Don’t have the issue tracking software installed.

    • Don’t give anyone URL, make it impossible to find.

    • Don’t give anyone access to the system, don’t create the accounts.

    • Make it as user-unfriendly as possible, use obscure language and hard to understand process.

    • If someone still tries to use it make them populate hundreds of irrelevant fields, hide information that they want to find.

    • Make it time consuming to use.

    • Make management to condemn it.

    • Declare it a time waste that brings no real benefits.

    • Etc.

    All you’ve left to do afterwards is just to address these points in your plan.

DON’T’s

  • Don’t fight the system. Remember if they see you as a threat to the current convenient status quo then they will easily form a strategic alliance against you.

  • Don’t talk to management to simply communicate how bad you think the things currently are. Listen to the management to understand what opportunities and threats they believe are out there and then suggest how improving the production technology could help address these.

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vote up 1 vote down

Facts. All engineers believe in facts and science so this is the best chance of win.

Measure things and find out where problems lie (e.g. rework / bug ratios due to a lack of QA), if you have some stats then seniority doesn't matter it's up to other people to disprove your facts or listen to you. Either way they're engaging with you about these issues which is a plus. Compile the information and find some way of discussing the problems in the open.

Be careful to focus on the problems and not the solutions, otherwise people might just consider your figures to be a means to an end and start ignoring them. Offer many solutions, not just one, discuss the trade-offs and recommend the solutions you like.

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I think you're assuming too much reasonable behaviour of humanity - the major problem I'm personally facing is getting anything positive done in the face of pessimism, jobsworth apathy, and "too busy" crap. That last really annoys me because without better policy it's self-fulfilling. – annakata Jan 7 at 15:01
Well you have to find power brokers who are having difficulties and put the ideas to them. If you're expecting a complete turn around then you're probably out of luck, you're best bet is changing things one step at a time, little baby steps. Might be better to seek greener pastures. – Quibblesome Jan 7 at 20:02
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Lots of good answers here. I would prefer Ron Savage's answer, to look at it from their point of view.

In addition, maybe it sounds sappy, but there are unspoken non-technical forces at work that are very powerful, precisely the positive or negative tone of your relationship with your colleagues. There is no reason not to have a positive tone. For example, no matter how they work, are they bad people? If you were given an assignment to find something positive or praiseworthy to say about each of them, I'm sure you could find plenty. If any of them had a personal emergency, wouldn't you go the extra mile to help them, and vice-versa?

When you determine that you're going to have a positive, friendly, respectful, helpful relationship with your colleagues (maybe you have already done this) then progress on mere technical issues is much easier. Otherwise it is basically impossible.

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Assume for the purposes of the question that an initial (say, 18 months) attempt to give them the benefit of the doubt and assume an engaging, questioning demeanour has passed and the subject is now in a position where such investigation has determined that the work environment actually is genuinely insane. Summary: I tried to play nice, I got rebuffed: what now? – annakata Aug 30 at 16:22
@annakata: I learned this lesson the hard way, by getting fired, followed by taking a Dale Carnegie course, so maybe it's not as easy as it seems to me now. Saying you tried to play nice but got rebuffed sounds to me (maybe I'm wrong) that you kept it on a technical level, rather than on a human level. I'm not saying a positive tone always wins your disagreements, but a negative one is guaranteed to lose. If you can count these people as friends and good references, even while you seek other work, then I think you're doing it right. – Mike Dunlavey Aug 30 at 16:51
... but I know what you mean. I have worked with people who, for example, considered coding standards among the most important issues, or on the other hand had a total lack of them. No progress was to be made, but nevertheless they were good people. If you are interviewing for a new job, you can say you are looking for what you consider a more professional environment, but never, ever, bad-mouth your former colleagues. – Mike Dunlavey Aug 30 at 16:57
... because if you do, the interviewer will conclude you are a bad-mouther and will do the same in his or her organization. – Mike Dunlavey Aug 30 at 17:00
vote up 2 vote down

try No Pants Wednesday

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so did your account get hacked or what? – annakata Sep 3 at 19:53
no. I think it's a legit strategy in your situation – George Sep 8 at 13:57

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