vote up 8 vote down star
4

I've seen this many times. A junior developer grows in skills and knowledge to reach some intermediate-advanced stage after about 6-9 years in the field and starts wondering "what next?". I'm collating a top-level view of a handful of paths or archetypes for such a person to consider:

  • The Guru: This is a "growth in depth" approach, one where you truly find more and more esoteric niches to specialize in.
  • The Teacher: You've moved far ahead enough that you can start teaching/mentoring.
  • The Manager: You've always been a team-player, and would like to build your own.

Can you think of or suggest any other top-level paths? I'd appreciate a good definition with it to get a good feel for what you mean. I'm also not looking for "personality" ones like "OCD Freak", "Code Cowboy", "SO Addict" or other types of programmers.

flag

Please make it CW – Gamecat Feb 17 at 15:54
Sorry, I'm new. What CW and how do I do that? – alphadogg Feb 17 at 15:57
Edit the question and mark it community wiki. – Elie Feb 17 at 15:58
In reading stackoverflow.com/questions/128434/… seems like only polls, FAQish questions or heavily answered questions should be CW? I'm confused... – alphadogg Feb 17 at 16:10
Not being confrontational, but what are your reasons Gamecat? (So that I can better understand and serve the SO community...) – alphadogg Feb 17 at 16:10
show 2 more comments

7 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

The Specializing Generalist: Every problem involves learning in depth - both the problem domain and methods to address it.

The developers I admire most fit this category. They may become known for some area, and then they suddenly surprise everyone by showing up in some other area and tackle non-trivial tasks.

Developers should be good at learning and at problem solving!

link|flag
vote up 8 vote down
  • The Dead-Weight: Reaches a level of experience in one technology, then refuses to learn any others. Claims that one technology is the best, and everything else is inferior. Can only survive fixing legacy systems.
link|flag
Urgh, I hate that guy! – MrWiggles Feb 17 at 16:04
Me too. But, I am looking for advice to give people stuck in the position in my post. Recommending they become a Dead Weight won't go off so well... :) – alphadogg Feb 18 at 17:33
Agreed, I was being tongue-in-cheek. But I've seen it happen so often, it's something worth mentioning, if only to actively avoid it. – stusmith Feb 19 at 9:27
There is also the Polymorph Dead-Weight: guys who can learn a new language/technology if the job requires it, but they keep using the old approaches/paradigms without applying the leverage this new technology was used for in the first place. – mike nvck Mar 9 at 13:08
vote up 2 vote down

The Architect: No longer writing code, just doing high level designs for new system.

Typically embodied by big hair and a certain level of eccentricity. / joking // kind of

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

The Janitor: the only one knowledgeable in legacy applications. He is indispensable. Similar to the guru, but instead of looking for new niches, he's content to stay in his one esoteric niche (that everyone has moved on from).

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

The boss: running your own company.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

The Consultant : Selling his experience for lots of money.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I miss the mad scientist.

link|flag
Wouldn't that be somewhat like The Guru, just a little more unkempt? :) – alphadogg Feb 17 at 15:56

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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