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How many hours a day do you put into your job? Do software development jobs typically allow a balance between work and life?

And what's the difference, in that respect, between small companies (startups etc.) and big ones?

I'm asking because I will soon be finishing my Ph.D. in Computer Science and have to start planning my career. I don't want a job where working 12 hours a day or more is the norm. It's not that I'm not used to working hard. On the contrary, I'm currently working around the clock to finish my thesis. But it's very draining, and I do not want this kind of life after graduation. What are your experiences? I might also have the chance to get into a research lab at a company or university. (Where a university sounds probably less attractive exactly for the reasons I stated.)

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closed as exact duplicate by EBGreen, George Stocker, Steven A. Lowe, tvanfosson Feb 19 at 4:20

11 Answers

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9 to 6 and 5 days a week here. And I am thankful and pretty happy with it. :-)

Frank, I think it really depends on whether you love your work or not. If you love it, time just flies and your work will be fruitful.

I think that long work hours is caused by the management of companies.

A consistent long hour and tight deadlines are usually because of the inability of the company to create long term sustainability or their bad attitude on treating their employees. I don't think developers should be the scapegoat because they should be rewarded for the hard work they do.

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8-9 hours at office!!! 7-8 hours at home playing with pragrmming languages, learning new things!!!

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Wait!!! 9 hours at the office, and then 8 hours hacking at home? That's 17 hours. Plus probably sleep 7 hours? Or 6? When do you eat, run errands and do other things? – dehmann Feb 19 at 4:59
I sleep for 6 hours!! ( hours @ office includes 1 hour break! 7-8 hours also includes basic things like food etc mate :) – Shoban Feb 19 at 6:00
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How ever many hours you put in at the office, you should try to live near the office. Commuting can waste a lot of time. In an expensive area like Silicon Valley you may have to share a house or live in a one bedroom apt. to afford living smack dab in the center of it all and still have spending money.

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I put in 8 yrs at my last job working this schedule:

  • 8:45am Arrive at work
  • 11:30am Leave for lunch
  • 1:00pm Return from lunch
  • 4:30pm Leave for home

Total time at work: 6:15.

I was one of, if not the top developer at the company too. Sad thing is about 25% of my days were still waiting on other developers / teams to catch up or deliver dependencies.

At my new job, my days are a little different:

  • 8:45am Arrive at work
  • work through lunch while eating at my desk
  • 5:00pm Leave for home

Total time at work: 8:15.

Since I like what I'm doing a lot more at my new job, I enjoy the 8 hr work day.

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Why such a long lunch break? Wouldn't make more sense to take shorter lunch and get home earlier? – Uri Feb 19 at 4:30
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The stereotype (and it's apparently the stereotype you're asking for) is that:

  • Kids put in long hours (without being paid overtime), and the managers who hired them (who don't know any better) love them for that.

  • Older, 'senior' programmers have a life (maybe several lives ... children, even) and it's "just a job", 9 to 5 ... a good job, but a job ... and, because they are experienced, unlike the kids' fresh out of school, they get their work done within those narrow hours.

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Balance between work and... what? What's this life thing?

Seriously, it all depends on the company you work for, the team you're on, and you personally. I've had days where I've gone in and put in my time, and left. Then there are the days that we have a deadline coming up, we go to build, and... something blows up and we all end up staying until the sun comes up the next day.

The team does it because it's necessary, and we do it for each other. None of us wants to let any of the others down.

Personally, though, I do it because I love my job, and it is a big part of my life. It helps to have a family that understands and supports me, knowing that if I didn't need to spend 16 hours away from them, I wouldn't.

Besides, if I'm going to be coding anyway, it might as well be paying the bills. ;)

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As few as possible. This week I've done 3 lots of 8 hours in the office and 2 lots at home. Last week it was the reverse.

I'm far more comfortable working at home because there are fewer interruptions during the day (when it's not school break or sick kids). Not coming into the office daily can save around 2 hours a day in commuting. After a couple of days of working at home I find I feel refreshed because I've had a couple of hours extra sleep and also a couple of hours extra personal time.

My employer prefers that I come into the office as much as possible, which is fine, but it's also a hassle with commuting, and distractions. I rarely stay in the office more than 8 hours; not because I don't want to, but because long term that is draining on your stamina, health, and personal life.

If you've got some flexibility then try and find a balance that works for you and your employer. When you're negotiating your employment terms suggest working from home a couple of days a week. If they're not keen you can still take the job and go to the office 5 lots of 8 hours a week.

Also, avoid those "you are expected to work reasonable overtime hours without notice or compensation" type clauses. The phrase 'reasonable' is subjective and they can deem it to be as many hours as they see fit. If they insist on the clause have them quantify it down to x hours per month, so long as x is a number you're comfortable with. At least then, if they ask you to do more than that you can demand compensation for your valuable time.

Edit: A friend of mine once told me he'd just work each day until the assigned tasks for the day were done. In that way he was doing 12 hours most days. Very draining. He completed so much work that his manager drones didn't adjust their estimates of his ability down to a sane level and kept assigning him more and more work. Over time they started to assume everyone else was slacking off and assigning more work to everyone and setting shorter deadlines to complete everything.

The moral of that story is if you regularly slave to complete all the assigned tasks you will set very high expectations of your abilities, and possibly wind up with too much work and not enough time.

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Software development and tight deadlines really go hand and hand. Actually I think business and tight deadlines go hand in hand. With tight deadlines comes long hours (a lot of the time).

That said. In my experience, which has been working for myself, small companies, doing consulting for large companies, and now being a partner in a medium sized company, I would say that it really depends on the attitude of the organization.

Currently, with my team, we do end up working some long hours, but I treat it as a problem that must be solved. I look at anything more than 40 hours a week as an issue that needs to be addressed, usually it was bad planning in some fashion. The important thing is that we strive for a reasonable work week and when it doesn't happen we try to make up for it and correct it. Because of this the employees do whats needed of them when they have to. It makes for a nice, understanding environment.

So my main advise for you when you set out and start interviewing is to see what the companies attitude is towards deadlines and hours. And don't forget to talk with employees and see what they think because if your work ends up more like an extended family, you may enjoy the time enough where its not even an issue.

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It really depends on both the company and the industry. Video Game companies, for instance, tend to have very hard deadlines and I've heard plenty of horror stories about very long nights.

As for balancing work and life, I've been very lucky in that I have always worked places where that was not an issue. The trick is being passionate about what you do, for instance, I'm working on an issue right now that is work related, but it's an issue I /want/ to solve. How do you classify out of work hours spent researching a new language or framework? I do it because I want to, but it certainly could be considered "work" related.

Most (all?) development positions are salaried, what this means is you get paid the same. Some weeks you'll work 40+, some 40, and once in a great while perhaps a tad less. It's all the same in the wash.

The real question is, what is software development to you? Is it your job that you get paid to do? Or is it your craft that you love to do, that you are immensely lucky to get paid to do?

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While I love to do software development, I certainly wouldn't want a job where they expected me to spend 60 hours a week doing work related to the job. I like software development, but I have other interests too, and I like to explore aspects of software development not related to my job. – Kibbee Feb 19 at 2:59
Re: "you get paid the same". I think that is a myth that many companies use to get free overtime out of developers who don't know any better. I've worked at 4 different companies and they all paid overtime (as long as you put in more than 5 hours OT in a week). And yes, these were salaried positions – Dunk Feb 19 at 3:23
Oh don't misunderstand, I'm not saying to give your life to the company. But complaining about a 42 hour week would be silly IMHO. I don't mind working extra hours, as long as the company doesn't give me the run around when I need a day or two off. Or long lunch, etc. – mletterle Feb 19 at 14:59
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It depends greatly on the company. The place I work at has a strict "8 hours a day" policy (plus the occasional on-call shift which you get time-in-lieu for if you actually have to do anything). I arrive, do my 8 hours, and leave, and nobody ever tries to put pressure on me to stay longer.

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7 to 8 hours for day time job.

The rest of the time is study at home.

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