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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 1 vote down

I believe you hit the nail on the head when you said, "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."

At Minnebar I heard a fellow giving a presentation on communication for engineers. One of the things he said was don't "compliment" people. They aren't really seen as all that sincere, like it's something you say because it's expected, or worse that you say to be flattering when you're trying to get someone to do something.

He said the best thing to do is keep your compliments selfishly oriented. I appreciate when you do 'x' because it affects me 'y'. Exactly like you had in your example. Like, "I love when a task lands on your plate so I don't have to worry about how it will be done." "Good job answering that group's questions, you made our team look really smart." Etc.

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vote up 2 vote down

Give them more responsibility (if it's warranted), like a more sophisticated project.

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vote up 4 vote down

One thing to realize about rewarding people, they only appreciate being rewarded for things they are proud of. The best thing you can do is figure out with each person how to recognize when they are proud of something, then reward them for that in some way (doesn't really matter how).

The counter example is also true. Once at a company meeting I saw a project manager give kudos to his team for all their hard work, when he had forced them to cancel holiday vacations. They wanted to lynch him.

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vote up 2 vote down

It's been said here several times as I scan... communicate with them. Make sure that you mention it in front of others and whatever you do, make sure that you include them in your successes. Nothing takes the wind out of a developer's sails like hearing his manager take credit for what he did. It also sounds like you are gaining man-hours by not having to correct your developers. Sounds like it's time to buy them a pizza lunch and maybe let them verbalize ideas they might have for making things even better.

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vote up 3 vote down

Ask them how you can help them do their job even better with the additional free time you have because they do such a great job right now.

There are always some things that you can shield them from. For example office politics or bureaucracy.

This also includes standing up for them when a conflict arises between members in the team and 'outsiders'. Or when you get a project with a hard-to-do schedule, let alone an impossible one.

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vote up 3 vote down

Give them some slack to learn and play. To stay on top of their game, a developer must constantly be learning new details and features.

Google, for example, allows their developers to spend a fraction of their time on a project of their choice. Obviously this could get out of hand, but I think the real key is giving developers a sense of ownership in their products, teams, and companies.

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vote up 14 vote down

I've always admired the leaders that:

  • when things go wrong, they accept personal responsibility and
  • when things go right, they direct any accolades to the team
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vote up 2 vote down

Tell them they're doing a great job. Expect great stuff from them. Tell others how great your developers are. Give them the power to create the working conditions they want.

Paying more will only motivate them for a couple of weeks. The above will make them work for you for free. Sort of. ;-)

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vote up 5 vote down

One thing I don't see mentioned here is "going to bat for them". I like to protect my dev team from the suits up above. Generally developers and suits don't see eye-to-eye on anything, so it's best to keep the developers out of that business side, because if they didn't hate it they'd be bucking for more managerial duties anyway. Also it helps to translate from developer to suit, because suits like to reward in crazy ways...

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vote up 1 vote down

Reward them with fun and important things to do, alongside the praise and recognition. "That was really clever. Here are some other brain-bangers I have on my plate. Let me know if you come up with something clever for one of them."

I'm very motivated by the opportunity to try to come up with something unusual, something other people have scratched their heads over for a while. Best of all, a fresh perspective can often turn up something obvious that everyone else missed. Which makes me feel good, which makes me do a better job.

Give them a chunk of time to work on their own work-related projects, while in the office. An hour or two a week. You'll wind up with some very helpful code, and some well-developed well-rounded employees.

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vote up 0 vote down

I've tried praise - it worked some of the time. Eventually, the person may not consider it very important. So now I reserve actual praise for an extraordinary acheivement. For small stuff done well, I buy them an expensive chocolate. Seems to work well.

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vote up 1 vote down

Let them know that their work is appreciated through verbal queues, take a successful team out for a dinner every now and then or after a big product release as a thank you and to even inspire team building.

Really though, most of the times I just enjoy being told "Thanks" it makes me feel like all the time I was working wasn't just for my paycheck, but it made a difference.

Money is good too, but I agree with some people above where it ends up like you're training a dog and the programmer will realize it.

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vote up 2 vote down

Say "Thank you", and give them something more challenging (and important) next time out. Make sure they know that they are being given greater responsibility as a result of their success. For problem solvers, that feels good.

Find out what motivates the individuals on your team. There's no one size fits all solution. Some people like to be appreciated daily, others prefer it only when they do something they (as others noted) are proud of.

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vote up 1 vote down

A good way to give feedback (positive or corrective)

SBIC

Situation / Behaviour / Impact / Consequences

e.g. "Yesterday morning, when you sat with that person until they understood how to get around their problem, you really made them happy. If you keep up this good work, you'll go far."

"This morning you arrived late to the stand-up. When you arrive late the team lose respect for you. If this continues then you may find that you are no longer included in the interesting projects."

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vote up 0 vote down

Little things are occasional and may be not even done in a right direction. Good work is good only if it helps somebody in a team. Because for good personal results (no bugs, in schedule etc) people getting salary.

So if it looks like you need to apprise something done well and if it is not clear who may benefit from this then to support motivation manager should help and tell his opinion. If he knows who will benefit from this good work he tells who it is to the team. If it is unclear then appraisal should be personal. May be like having beer after work together.

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If you DO appreciate their work, you don't need a list. Otherwise, faking appreciation or care is worse than saying nothing.

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vote up 1 vote down

Avoid anything even remotely monetary (I'm looking at you, gift certificates)

At a previous job at a large company, I was rewarded with a $50 gift certificate to amazon after completion of some major project where I worked long hours. Quickly do the math... because that's what the employee is doing. If your rewards make them think their extra hours are getting paid below minimum wage that's not really going to help very much.

Acknowledgement is really the best thing you can do.

You should already be taking your employees out for beer... team happy hours or meals. Go-cart racing. They should already have the biggest monitors and everything they need to do their job because you want them to be productive. They should already have more vacation time than they know what to do with also. None of these things are appropriate for a reward.

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