As it says on the tin - why do managers care what time I start work? I want to try to understand this, so I can accommodate them better.
As far as I am concerned, as long as the person does the job by the deadline, there is nothing to worry about.
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As it says on the tin - why do managers care what time I start work? I want to try to understand this, so I can accommodate them better. As far as I am concerned, as long as the person does the job by the deadline, there is nothing to worry about.
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Maybe because you may be working with a team ? or maybe you may have to pick up your phone from time to time to answer calls? |
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Depends on what you mean by what time you start. If you start at 9-9.30, I know I wouldn't care. If you turn up at 11 I most definitely would (and no I don't care if you stay til 9pm). Why? Because there is hardly any programming job on earth that doesn't require you to interact with the three dimensional people. This is typically a more important part of your job than turning ideas and requirements into code. After all, it's the three dimensional people that define what's required. |
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In some places there are regulation that dictate that you should be paid more when you work out of regular working hours. Also when working in a team, the team might need you to do something and if you are not there, you might stop everyones work |
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You manage code and you demand that the framework on you which you develop returns consistent results, managers manage people and demand that those people return consistent results, same thing I wouldn't take it personally and if you feel uncomfortable with it, talk about it and arrange something else or seek employment with a company that doesn't mind what you do. Don't stay and hate it though |
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Unless you work completely alone on a project (and that means with no coworker, no client, no manager, ...) communication is usually the hardest part of a project. Working together, in the same room at the same time helps a lot. Not all managers are that strict on when you start to work. But having at least some times during the day helps you planify meetings, exchange informations ... The most important is not that you start at 8am or 10am, it is that everybody starts more or less at the same time. Starting work at the same time also means that you can start the day by having a coffee with all the team and exchange informations informaly in a more pleasant way than a formal meeting. |
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Mostly it's just a necessity. Sometimes team members, coworkers and your boss need you at a certain time. Sometimes having ludicrously strict work times could be a sign of a control issue. It gives the boss the impression (or illusion) that he/she is control. (See Peopleware for more on this subject) If that's the case, you can probably find other ways to ensure your boss, that he's in charge. Perhaps by giving weekly reports. |
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It depends. Some managers without technical background will review your performance by other aspects. e.g. if you start on time, finish early or long lunch break. Technical managers will look more into your work at low level, so time is the second to them. However, they do take time into account as well to determine if you are a self-discipline person. All in all the time of start work is important, It'd be good if you can ask for permission to start late and work late with the manager you directly report to and stick to it. |
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Communication. You need to speak to other people, and so they want you working at the same time as those people. Logistics. If the office gets cleaned between 6:00pm and 7:30pm, then managers may not want other employees getting in the way. There's also issue about parking, extra lighting, alarm systems, backups, etc, etc. Keeping an eye on you. If you start and finish three hours after them, there's going to be three hours when you're doing stuff they don't know about and can't monitor. Friction. It's seen as usual that people start at about 9:00, and finish at about 5:30, and so - anyone that doesn't do this will be deemed as "different". It's stupid, but coworkers and managers will see an adherence to petty historical rules as being "part of the job". By working the hours you want (or not wearing a suit), you'll be sending the signal that you're special. Managers may also not be able to grok flexible working hours. |
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Managers cannot force you to work, so they try to make you attend at the office at the particular time |
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For the most part, I work whenever I want. For the most part, managers don't like this. It makes me difficult to handle (see all the other responses people have given viz. face-time, communicating with the team, etc...) In order to overcome this difficulty, I need provide some offsetting benefit to my managers. I offset the difficulty by being really good for the level my manager expects. In other words, I'm not claiming to be an expert in all things. I'm just claiming to be significantly better than my managers expect me to be for my "pay grade". So when I was a Junior Nobody, I was the best Junior Nobody at my company. Now that I'm a Senior Thread & Sockets Dude, I'm pretty much the best Senior Thread & Sockets Dude at my company. I have consistently gotten away with this up to a point everywhere I have worked. I mean several things by "up to a point". Right now my project is in a design phase, so my manager want me in no latter than 1pm. Latter when the project starts QA, I will likely need to be in by 10am, since QA can pretty much grind to a halt if the person needed to answer a question isn't easily available. Also, I usually get to a point within 3 - 5 years where, no matter how expert/fast/good I am, my managers don't want to deal with my hours any longer. That's when they start talking about things like "core hours". That's also when they start holding me to a higher standard then anyone else (including themselves). For example, telling me the standard business hours are 8am, but they show up at 10am every day! Aside from that 3 - 5 year limit at any given job, there are other things I surrender for my perks. This definitely effects salary. I pretty much need to do the work of someone at least one pay grade higher then mine, so if I just started working the same hours as everyone else, I would almost certainly get a promotion. It effects my career. I am old enough where a lot of people decide to go into management, or fight for positions like company/project/team architect. These are career paths that require a lot of face-time. I have been told at more than one job that if I worked core hours, I would have been given the mentor/lead/architect position that went to so-and-so. It effects my job opportunities. Nobody is going to assign me a job that needs a lot of day-to-day coordination with other team members. You can only do so much via email. (I personally believe you can do more then most people will even try to do, but duh, what would you expect me to say.) If the coding up the really cool WizbangFeature® requires three people working as a single brain, well, you can bet I won't be picked for that task. This last limitation can be good. Sometimes I get, "Hey Mike, go spend 3 months figuring out how to do this impossible cool task." On the other hand, I also get a lot of, "Hey Mike, go write the logging and installation crap!" Sometimes people think I must be special, since I get away with everything I get away with. This mystique can be a huge plus. Unfortunately, it seems to usually wear off, and then people just start thinking I'm a big pain-in-the-ass. I do my best to pay attention to the vibe I get from people, and adjust my hours if I can before someone else decides to bring it up. Anyway, you too can live the dream. The real question is, do you think it's worth the price? |
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For communications, it's easier if people working on the same project are around at the same time. It's better to have face-to-face discussions than to try to communicate by leaving e-mails and voice messages.
Because the developer can't start yet, should he/she then work late to finish off the work that has been held up by John? Should the manager have to stay behind to make sure everything's done by the end of the day? It's also a matter of perceptions, both within the company and externally. A similar exchange with a customer would not create a good impression. Customers expect people to be available during normal office hours. If they can't get an update on when their critical bug will be fixed because you don't do mornings, it doesn't go down well. |
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I don't mind if a guy shows up late if he's good. By that I mean, he understands what's required of him, delivers good results in a reasonable time, and stays in touch and is available early if there are meetings or whatever required of him. He's a professional, and I shouldn't have to manage his time. That said, it's definitely better if he's there by say 9:30 at the latest, all other things being equal. It's just that there's more opportunity to interact spontaneously if something comes up. |
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Having been on the receiving end of people who think they don't need to follow the same time rules as everyone else I can tell you some of why management hates it when you don't come in on time:
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Best Buy Corporate lets all employees come in whenever they want. They've got a work system where they pretty much converted the work environment to a more college-style, where nobody cares how you get the job done as long as it gets done on time. If someone needs info from you, they call your cellphone or email. Overall, it resulted in a 30% boost in productivity and a 90% drop in turnover! The big problem is that such a change is a cultural-shift and you have work at changing people's thinking. For example, they label making judgments against a person for the hours they work 'sludge' and talk about ways to respond to sludge by turning the conversation to results, instead of how long your butt wasn't glued to your chair. I'm trying to push this "Results-Only Work Environment(ROWE)" at my job now. Here's the website: www.culturerx.com |
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Another concern is when you have a team that contains both young folks and people who have families. The younger folks (to which I used to belong... :( tend to show up very late, say around noon, whereas the older folks (to which I will soon belong... :) have to get up early, make breakfast for the kids and send them to school, and are then out the door by 8am or so. As a result, the time that both sides of the team are collocated is much shorter. That being said, I would much prefer to start late. Especially if I'm commuting. |
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Mostly it’s compensation for non-planning-ahead management style. You have to be in the office to answer the call, fix the customer issue, etc. Right now, most of developers are managers for themselves: they schedule work, manage tasks priorities, communicate with peers. Bottom line: unless you are on contract or performing some "leaf"-level (such as typing code lines) task, you are paid to be available to perform non-scheduled work. |
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My director recently started this policy for us due to pressure from senior management. Most managers, being employees themselves, take cues from the command chain. Developers at their desks by 8AM achieve three things. 1) Mornings overlap with work days for teams in India and Russia. Emails don't sit all day waiting for an answer, something that's lousy for effectiveness AND morale. 2) Major customer issues get handled on their time, so they stay major customers 3) Being reliable about 1 & 2 saves your manager from senior management crap Small groups might avoid this 8AM mandate, but it's also possible they're working earlier and later in an all-out startup mentality. In that case, they probably didn't hire someone who starts at 10AM in the first place! |
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Everybody has said communication so far, but I think perception is a bigger issue -- if you're in a non-IT business. My boss has been pretty flexible about my start time: I chose it (9.30am), but have to stick to it. If someone in a more time-critical job gets in late they'll attract his wrath, so why should I be allowed to wander in whenever I feel like? It's certainly not that I don't do the hours -- but people working 9-5 don't always see the fact I'm still here at 7 or 8pm finishing things up :-) |
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