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I am in a tech lead role and my developers get stuff right most of the time. How do I communicate to them thier value to me? (I.e. they have value because I do not have to go through and point out mistakes which means I do not have to watch them like a hawk which frees me to do more useful things).

In summary

For doing the mundane well on a day to day basis, it is good to recognise the developers effort verbally to them. An honest thankyou that mentions the specific behaviour and its positive repercussions to you personally will be well received, adjust the language to suite each individual. (Note that other developers within earshot may also respond to this by increasing their efforts in this specific activity.)

Other things that should be done regularly are:

  1. Team drinks
    In many cultures this is an entirely worthy way of giving the team some time to socialise and relax. Be sure that you do not exclude people who do not drink or are not keen on pub culture. Shared meals are another option.

  2. Formal written (email) acknowledgment and praise to senior managers of the teams efforts and successes. (Note that acknowledging individuals alone may damage team spirit)

  3. Work the hours you expect your team to do. If they absolutely must work late for a deadline, be there in support Go to bat for the team. Refuse to let them be forced to work long periods of overtime without compensation.

  4. Protect them from level politics and stress.

  5. Give your team the best equipment you can afford. Good tools show respect and improve productivity.

  6. Small or large team rewards where appropriate can consist of many interesting activities/ items. If it allows the team to get together in a fun and even lightly competitive manner it will work (foosball table, go-karting, darts board, video game console etc). Don’t forget to listen to what the team wants, each team will have different ideas.

  7. Ensure they are getting a fair deal financially from the company. While different people may have different expectations of their pay, someone being paid unfairly will rot morale for the entire team

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47 Answers

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vote up 52 vote down check

How about telling them? "You did a really good job on that project!" is usually very motivating and cheaper than lunch ;-) No really, most of the time a developer just want to hear his work is appreciated.

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Don't say it too much or too often though. It's like "I love you" - if you tell it to everyone all around you all the time, it just loses it's value. – Paulius Maruška Jun 10 at 4:41
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+1: I recommend following this up with a note to the supervisor. "Did you hear about the great job that X did on Y? Boy, that was great work!" Little notes like that are wonderful ammunition for the supervisor when they go looking for who they should give the raise / bonus money to around performance review time. – Bob Cross Sep 24 at 15:43
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vote up 2 vote down

Lunch.

Simple, cheap, motivating (for me anyway...)

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vote up 11 vote down

Lunch, doughnuts, the occasional low-cost gadget.

"Thanks for making my job easier" is a really nice thing to hear as well.

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vote up 16 vote down

Go out for a beer after work and spring for a round...

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Prefer the coffee much more than alcohol... makes me work faster, and Faster and FASTER! – Scott Saad Sep 17 '08 at 4:20
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I'm also on a tech lead role. What I do is tell then that they have done a great job, and some times, I pay them some beers. Works really good, and keeps everyone in the team happy, including me.

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vote up 2 vote down

A manager saying "good job" is pretty nice to hear (or read by email).

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vote up 0 vote down

buy them like some songs off amazon mp3. developers love music.

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vote up 1 vote down

Try telling them, they did a good job. Thank them. People like acknowledgment. But be very careful, that it sounds true or you will have the opposite effect. And after telling them, they did a great job, do all the other stuff mentioned here

(Free Beer and lunch! And after a big project consider a Wii or a RockBand setup ;-) )

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vote up 1 vote down

Bring in some nice coffee in the morning. Make sure you know what everyone takes before hand.

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vote up 1 vote down

I agree with a lot of other posters above. Cheap things such as Lunch, a Beer, or even a small gadet can be nice.

But don't forget that even a 'pat on the back' can go a long way as well.

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vote up 18 vote down
  • The cheapest and perhaps most important action - as Lincoln said, simply thanking people for a job well done, perhaps publicly counts for more than you might imagine.
  • The obvious - pay increase/bonus :-)
  • Better equipment, i.e. 38" widescreen monitors, super-fast computers, etc. - I know that sounds expensive but in the long run taking into account the overall cost of a developer it's not that much really and goes a huge way to improving developer morale. Think Google - they have to retain some of the smartest devs on the planet. Crazy freebies, a free drinks machines, free trips to places, etc. All this stuff counts for more than it costs.
  • More freedom to show your respect to your developers - flexitime, etc.
  • A nice meal, perhaps out of the blue, etc.

I guess a lot of the stuff is really nice stuff you might do for any well-performing workplace, adapted for geeks :-)

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vote up 23 vote down

Always mention your team and their achievements in the reports to your superiors (and don't forget to cc: the team).

Stay with them when they burn the midnight oil (and order the pizza and coke :)

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Pizza is great so long as it doesn't get confused for a cheap form of overtime payment – David Sykes Oct 21 '08 at 10:06
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vote up 3 vote down

Hire more people who are able to do a good job.

Fire the ones who don't

The one thing that programmers love is working with peers in their level or above, people they can learn from.

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vote up 2 vote down

If you don't want to do code reviews with them, then let them code review each other, and do partner programming. Also advise them to signup to beta.stackoverflow.com. This will improve their abilities.

In terms of positive rewards, I believe in a giving financial rewards out of the blue, sending people home on a friday early, and mentoring them through the hard times (personal or professional) is a much better use of your managerial position.

I don't believe in targets

  • Asking a developer to close 32 bugs in a week will just make them cherry pick the easy ones.
  • Asking a developer to write 400 lines of code a week will just make them write 300 lines of rubbish.
  • Asking a developer to stay late 3 nights a week will make them spend 2 nights a week looking for another contract.
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vote up 7 vote down

Cash. Really. Gift certificates are good, too.

As far as the after-work stuff, I just don't want to hang out with co-workers after work. I just want to go home and be with the family. But if that works for your people, go for it.

I guess you could just ask them how they'd like to be rewarded.

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vote up 0 vote down

Personally, I like cookies. A lot of times my supervisor will offer one to me as a reward.

Looking quickly on google there are plenty of ideas available.

For me extra perks and rewards are nice, but they don't compare to being told directly that you are appreciated and an asset to the team.

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vote up 0 vote down

An honest compliment.

Some number of your developers are introverts that are constantly scared of losing their job, even if such a fear is unrealistic. Honest, unprovoked compliments (i.e., "good job on that presentation") will go a long way.

I'd say something like Starbucks cards but you can never be sure who likes what (I don't do coffee, for example)

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vote up 1 vote down

A good word and smile is the most important, I think.

A cold beer after work or putting your programmers favourite snacks in the office will be probably also appreciated. Do not ask about work progress every hour or make a conferences about the problems when everybody is trying to solve them.

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vote up 0 vote down

The previous company I was working for would throw a huge party if our project was a success, which was always a lot of fun.

As for other incentives, they let us pick and choose our own machines/monitor set up, and every year gave us a budget to buy equipment on. So we could personalise our own work space, and the way we worked. They also gave us time between projects to just hang out and relax, work on our own projects, and or use the huge media room they had set up to watch movies and play games.

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vote up 0 vote down

I work as a 'keyboard monkey' developer where I tend to do 20 ish very small jobs a day.

To be honest I can't remember the last time I got posative feedback from my team lead. (It's not just me, all the programmers say it, and we all usually get posative feedback direct from clients, so we must be doing a good job)

Personally, I would love nothing more than a simple, "good job" from time to time or "Thanks for completing that task a day early".

If you find yourself with more time due to the sterling work from your team, show to them that you are re-investing it back into the team. Something as simple as completing a report for someone certainly wouldn't go unnoticed.

Failing that... Two words... "Donut Fridays!"

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vote up 8 vote down

Don't give them incentive pay. It communicates to them (incorrectly) that they are dogs who only perform their work for a treat.

Also, unless you reward everyone the same way you will produce animosity and jealousy within your ranks. You'll wind up rewarding the worst person on your staff because he had a good day and anger the other employees who are consistently solid.

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vote up 1 vote down

Gift certificates for:

  • Amazon.com
  • Fry's electronics (or the equivalent)
  • best buy

As well as a "Thank you" in a card (paper card), so they can show their significant other. It makes a big difference.

A $15 gift certificate to Amazon.com and a paper card with "Thanks you for a great job on project X" would go a long, long way to show appreciation.

And it's cheaper than a lunch. Why? because I can eat, but I'm supposed to lose weight.

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vote up 4 vote down

Just point out that you like what they did. 'You're doing a great job' may be goofy, but saying, 'Feature X has worked out really well' is more meaningful and to the point. They know why you are telling them you appreciate them and its not aimed directly at them but instead at the work they have done which is what the company cares about most.

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vote up 0 vote down

Nothing beats a free lunch....but make it a gift card so I don't have to have lunch with the boss

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vote up 0 vote down

When we do well, our group receives sweets or chocolates! :) If food is not an option, Thinkgeek always has interesting gift ideas.

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vote up 1 vote down

wow. i'd be worried by the language you're using.

"little things"?

Don't you see their contributions in the light of the overall project?

Hmmmm. "Lttle things" huh? Bet that motivates them! (VBG) (-:

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vote up 3 vote down

I worked for a startup a few years ago, and they used to take us to the go-cart race track a few miles from the office after getting through a busy phase. Granted, we were a pretty small company, but it really made us feel special, and it was a great way to relax on a Friday afternoon.

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vote up 8 vote down

Walk 1000 lines of code in their shoes.

Be a decent, respectful human being.

Recognize work well done (good ideas already mentioned).

Encourage a team culture where apathy, not failure, is the worst that can happen.

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vote up 1 vote down

Be aware of their successes, communicate them, and make sure that you cultivate a positive atmosphere. Just the fact that you're willing to ask this kind of question goes a long way to proving that you're doing that. Couple of caveats:

  • Incentive based work leads to gaming the system. If you reward for specific things, do it on a very temporary basis to focus them on a particular issue (e.g. removing all major bugs from a system within 2 weeks, reward/bug found and fixed)
  • Make sure they're proud of the product. If it looks like they're doing something not totally relevant, but seem to be enjoying it, give them some leeway. Being able to put a personal stamp on the project is worth a lot of beer. Also, instead of a co-worker with a hangover, you get a feature.
  • Rather than generic gifts, try making sure you recognise their individual needs. One guy might benefit from an extra hour off on Fridays, while another might like doughnuts with sprinkles in the canteen. Personally, I think generic gifts send a certain message of "I feel I should reward you, but I have no idea who you are." That's acceptable, just about, in a big project for a large company, but not within a small team. As the comment below suggests, try and tailor any gift to the individuals involved.
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