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The Joel Test is a measure of how a team performs with regards to the best practices in coding. What questions, given a 'yes' answer, would subtract from the the Joel test score?

(Assuming you don't simply negate the current questions on the 'Joel Test', ie: "Do you have no source control?")

For example:

  • Does the company insist on being very process heavy?
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This should probably be CW. – Paul Tomblin May 23 at 11:34
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Terrific question. I will almost certainly apply this in practice. – User May 23 at 13:12
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@Vaibhav Garg: Make it 10 upvotes then make it a community wiki please. Otherwise local farmers will likely close it. – User May 23 at 13:14
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It is good practice for the closers to explain why this post was closed – Kb May 23 at 17:40
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87 Answers

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vote up 175 vote down

Do you do your development work on the live production server?

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+1, I physically cringed when I read your answer. – JaredPar May 23 at 11:41
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I can beat that - I once did a gig where they did their training in C++ programming on the production server. – Neil Butterworth May 23 at 13:00
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@Neil B: That's utter insanity. But maybe we should be glad they're operating a software company and not running an Army firing range! – John Feminella May 23 at 13:30
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Any direct access to production at all is sub-optimal – Joel Coehoorn May 27 at 13:26
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Kwang, my experience is that people who do it know it is wrong and still do it even when they say "I know I shouldn't do it but..." The colleague who I said I caught doing it was told by me that I was not going to help them with their problem because it was just too risky - I found out that another colleague had actually set him up a mirror on another server. It must have been too much effort to connect to it. He won't install a dev db on his own machine because it might make it unstable. If you repeat that last sentence a few times, it might make your head explode. – Neil Trodden May 28 at 1:41
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vote up 118 vote down

Is the chief technology officer an accountant?

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+1 from me - VERY good. – duffymo May 23 at 11:33
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ooh, yeah, that's a bad one – Martin DeMello May 23 at 15:14
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vote up 116 vote down

Is there a dress code which includes a suit and tie?

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I see how programmers wouldn't like this (hence no downvote), but this as a reason to mark down a job sounds like being a primadonna. We should all dress professional and not like hippies and slobs, anyways. – Wayne M May 23 at 12:07
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I think that when coding, a tie is overkill. I find it hard to concentrate when my top button is buttoned up and I'm slightly uncomfortable. If programmers should be meeting with clients on a particular day then they should dress for the occasion but otherwise, there is nothing wrong with shorts and flip-flops in my opinion. – Simucal May 23 at 15:42
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With no further insight, if I wanted a piece of software developed, I would pick the company that employs nerds dressed in t-shirt, jeans and sandals over a company where the developers wears suits with ties, dress shoes and slicked back hair. – JulianR May 23 at 21:32
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All the people here who think they're more professional because they wear a suit and tie crack me up. Mindlessly following rules that make people less productive isn't the professional thing to do. A professional is somebody who GETS STUFF DONE. – Chuck May 23 at 22:54
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My father used to quip "the only use of a tie, from an engineer's perspective, is to limit blood flow to the brain". He was usually careful to follow up with how this might be a useful function in certain meetings... – leander May 24 at 19:20
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vote up 111 vote down
  • Do web filters block out forums making it difficult to research online?

  • Is the work environment noisy making it difficult to concentrate?

  • Is the work schedule an inflexible 8-5?

  • Do they expect tier 1 support in addition to your programming duties?

  • Does management have no true understanding of development?

    • Despite this, does management "think" they know development?
  • Do they fail to provide an outlet for being creative?

  • Do they fail to provide adequate development hard/software?

  • Do they deny developers admin rights to their own box?

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+1 for the management think they know enough about development, but do not. As The Colonel story daily WTF. – Jem May 23 at 13:03
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I think giving admin rights to a developer for his own box when he requests it is a reasonable and good practice. – pts May 23 at 14:37
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Developers admin rights to their own box? What's wrong with that? – David Berger May 23 at 14:43
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I've worked places before where they did not grant developers admin rights on their own box. It made development extremely difficult and I would never put up with it again. – Cuga May 23 at 16:54
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Quiet work environment is on the original Joel Test. – Cameron MacFarland May 24 at 23:37
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vote up 65 vote down

Do developers have to account for their time in small increments?

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+1 - Micromanagement FTL – Wayne M May 23 at 23:15
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No downvote, but I'm not sure I agree. I suppose it depends on what you mean by "account". Keeping track of time spent on different bits of a project allows for more realistic estimates and can be an early warning indicator that something's gone wrong. – Tom Wright May 25 at 0:30
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Keeping track of time spent in minor increments means that everything takes three times as long to complete! – Peter Boughton May 25 at 12:33
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As Peter Boughton said, if you start keeping a very granular time sheet, most of your day will be spent of the context switch from filling it out. – Spoike May 27 at 12:11
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Ugh.. I have to track my whole day in 15 minute increments. This is just one of three (yes, three) time tracking tools we're required to use. That thing is giving me ulcers since it's practically expected that 100% of our time is billable to a specific client request, and management has aliased the word "estimate" to mean "definitive number, god help you if you're one minute over." – AgentConundrum May 28 at 0:07
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vote up 54 vote down
  • Does management think that paying a consultant to teach on-site classes is the most effective way for developers to learn a new technology?

  • Is there at least one case where a single person unilaterally makes software architecture decisions for more than three simultaneous, ongoing, non-trivial projects?

  • Is the coding standard an inviolable straitjacket that serves to hinder rather than inform?

  • Is StackOverflow blocked at work?

  • Would management view time off to speak at a conference or other technical gathering relevant to your work as suspicious and/or unconditionally refuse it?

  • Do developers feel frustrated or stymied by managerial/organizational problems more often than technical ones?

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vote up 54 vote down

Is refactoring discouraged?

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vote up 53 vote down

Is the development team driven and controled by sales people?

Do you usually promise to create the documentation after the software is finished?

Do you hire cheap people because they cost less?

Do you let inexperienced people create new products, but experienced people finish and maintain whatever is created?

Are strategic alliances (instead of technical merits) the main argument for resp. against the use of a technology?

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+1 for "Do you hire cheap people because they cost less" – stefanB May 25 at 0:01
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mgb: I agree with you. Maybe I should have written "marketing people". Those who do not care about how happy the users are after the product is sold, but care a lot about how impressive the product looks in a power point presentation. – ammoQ May 30 at 4:20
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vote up 52 vote down

Does your source control consist of physically backing up your source tree into a source.backup.n directory every time you want to make too many changes?

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Isn't that what Subversion calls a branch? ;-) – rq May 24 at 20:50
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This is gonna sound like flamebait, but I'd much rather that than the old version of VisualSourceSafe we've got at work... Would kill for management allowing us to use svn, but it is deemed as "beta software" and "not MS". :( – voyager May 24 at 23:34
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It's funny how VSS is used in companies with the motivation that it is a MS product even though MS aren't using VSS themselves. This issue is nowadays adressed by replacing VSS with the version control system in TFS. – Spoike May 27 at 12:02
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To me, this is a variant on negating Joel's question #1. I take it to mean: "Do you use real source control?" – JeffH May 27 at 18:25
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Bonus points if the copies are called "backup", "old backup", "old old backup" and "copy of Old backup" – Martin Beckett May 29 at 17:41
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vote up 43 vote down

Did the last developer you hired leave quickly? Usually high turnaround in IT means at least one of two things: A) The code is wretched and unmaintainable, and/or B) Management has highly unrealistic expectations about programmers.

Also: Does the team not care about learning new things, experimenting with new technologies and at the very least check out what's "new" in their programming world? If they are like this then it means the team is a bunch of incompetent Morts and are mediocre at best.

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I find there are two sigmas with people being unwilling to learn. One is with .NET developers who think anything outside Visual Studio is scary, the other are low level trolls who thinks all those new fangled high level languages are criminally inefficient. Polar opposites. Thankfully, there are many good developers who sit comfortably between the two, using whatever language or framework best suits the job. – Soviut May 25 at 7:04
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Employee turnaround is a useful metric. – Kwang Mark Eleven May 27 at 20:54
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vote up 42 vote down

Is the primary development language an in-house only product?

Seen way too many Daily WTF where people were stuck developing in a language that was designed, built and consumed solely within the company. That would be a -10 for me.

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So that would mean FogCreek software itself gets a -1? I am not sure Joel would be very happy with this one. :) – Vaibhav Garg May 23 at 11:26
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an abomination in the name of all that's decent. It's called Wasabi: joelonsoftware.com/items/2006/… – foljs May 23 at 11:30
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Besides, is there a rule that people have to believe FogCreek is perfect? I like lots of what I hear, but no place is perfect. – acrosman May 23 at 14:00
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Comment too small for the 5 page rant I need to get one experience off my chest. Let me sum up "a 10 year old C++ code base driving a web site, #pragma'd out the yazoo (and not cleverly either) to build on 4 different platforms (2 were defunct for 5+ yrs), 3 (I'm not joking 3) different in-house scripting languages in various stages of completely (but all in use!) to build html forms, and an XSLT "like" declarative language (why not use XSLT?), all controlled by a raving lunatic-control-freak that had started the product as a thesis project, started a company around it, (continued) – Binary Worrier May 23 at 15:01
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Had been bought over twice. He'd never worked anywhere else and couldn't see anything wrong with the abhorrent behmoth he'd created. He once poured over a decorator I put on an existing smart pointer class for 40 minutes trying to find some reason not to allow it because "Design patters don't aren't always the best solution", actually it was because I was doing it in a way he wouldn't like. Worst work athmosphere I've ever encountered, I walked before my trial period was over. SO 4 different custom scripting languages, one of which was declarative, it was an absolute nightmare. BREATHE! ! ! – Binary Worrier May 23 at 15:06
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vote up 38 vote down

You're required to use IE6 at work. And you do web development.

Guilty as charged. Ugh.

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I am required to use IE6... sob! – Kwang Mark Eleven May 27 at 20:58
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vote up 34 vote down

Do I need to work weekends just before a big release?

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usually thats due to poor project management and planning. – Sam Saffron May 24 at 14:21
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That's software development. Might as well look for a tax accounting job where you don't have to work extra in April – MatthewMartin May 27 at 12:16
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Just because bad planning is common... doesn't make it right. – Matthew Whited May 27 at 18:21
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@MatthewMartin: That isn't software development, plenty of us can right code and keep a decent work-life balance. Weekends are my time. – Mike Arthur Aug 31 at 10:03
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What is this "project management" you speak of? – dangph Sep 25 at 11:31
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vote up 33 vote down
  • Is access to the internet blocked at work?
  • Are they inflexible about letting you work from home occasionally?
  • Does the management do task effort estimation?
  • Was it too easy for you to get an offer from the company? (All you had to do during the interview was to explain quicksort)
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vote up 29 vote down

Does the average developer have more than 3 hours of meetings a week?

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not sure if 3 is the magical number, but excessive meetings are definitely a productivity killer, +1 – Jimmy May 24 at 23:17
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10 minute scrums in the morning and an hour for a beer on Friday afternoon. +1 – cbp May 27 at 11:57
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vote up 27 vote down
  • Is the coding standard an inch thick?
  • Is Dilbert forbidden?
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Split this answer into three separate ones, and receive three votes from me instead of one. – Ola Eldøy May 23 at 12:07
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The Dilbert web site is blocked, but there several Dilbert books in the toilet. Partial credit? – Chris Huang-Leaver May 27 at 9:20
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vote up 26 vote down

Are working hours strictly enforced? Am I supposed to work 9-5 daily with no exceptions?

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If the best your boss has to say to you at review time is 'stop turning up at 10 past 9', then you could do with a better boss. I get way more done and voluntarily put in far more extra hours at my new company where I can start anytime between 8:30-10am. – cbp May 27 at 11:54
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+1 - countless times iv been told off for turning up 30mins late, yet no one seems to care when I stay 6 hours late finishing stuff off... – pzycoman Jun 8 at 12:12
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I actually got reprimanded by a manager, with CC: the CEO for showing up 20 minutes late THE DAY AFTER I stayed THREE HOURS after work helping the SAME manager fix a database he destroyed. – Neil N Oct 22 at 18:35
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vote up 25 vote down

Are your developers unhappy?

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vote up 24 vote down

is there no coffee maker?

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This question is very important for me, but I know many programmers who dislike coffee. – Kwang Mark Eleven May 27 at 20:57
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I think that crappy coffee indicates a lot. It says to me that a company would rather do the bare minimum to pacify employees than to spend a bit more and make them happy. I'm not asking for a cappuccino machine; just some coffee that doesn't taste like burnt cardboard that's been sitting in a warehouse for three years. – Adam Jaskiewicz May 28 at 20:11
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vote up 23 vote down

Does the build/deployment need 10 different manual commands which only one guy knows about?

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Isn't this covered by the Joel Test already, a 1-click build process? – Tim Sullivan May 23 at 15:28
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vote up 23 vote down
  • Do you only release a product if there aren't any more known bugs?
  • Is my manager non-technical?
  • Are there more than 3 people who can assign work to me without any approval?
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+1 on #3. I've been there before. – Jason Baker May 25 at 0:01
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vote up 22 vote down

Do they hire developers primarily based on academic degrees?

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I believe the result of that would be massive over-engineered projects that implement every single Gang of Four design pattern in the book. – Soviut May 25 at 7:07
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The keyword here is "primarily." I doubt Google is willing to hire anyone just by seeing his/her PhD. – Mehrdad Afshari May 27 at 18:33
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vote up 22 vote down

Do you expect developers to serve support requests while doing project work?

(= Do you let the urgent override the important?)

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Is unpaid overtime a regular occurrence, and nothing is being done to change that?

EDIT: StefanB notes that some overtime might be normal. I don't disagree with this, and in fact when I'm passionate about a project, I will give it of my own volition. But I've been in places where some is expected of the employee and is programmed into the schedule; I'm not talking about emergency situations that require occasional heroics, I'm talking about sizable chunks of time that show disrespect for the employee's personal time.

The law states you are paid for a standard work week of 40 hours. Dedicated employees have no problem giving a little extra, but when it's chronic or counted on by management, and that same management isn't comparably dedicated to offering comp time or overtime pay, that's when people are justified in being upset about it.

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@Mike Arthur: I wish, for myself and so many others dealing with corporate America, that it was that simple. – Bernard Dy Sep 1 at 15:28
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vote up 17 vote down

Here are the first two that popped into my head:

Are suggestions about programming techniques or implementation details from non-technical people taken seriously by management?

(As a corollary) Do employees from multiple departments without an ownership stake in technology make suggestions about programming techniques or implementation details and expect to be taken seriously?

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My project manager is great. He knows he's not technical, so he says, "Here, build this." I do and all is well. I've had plenty of project managers that want to micromanage every detail of a given project. – Drew May 24 at 20:14
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@Drew You're very lucky! – AndrĂ© May 25 at 15:06
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Are rules set in stone, even if the programmer have a good reason to break them?

This is actually why I dislike places that requires a suit - it is not the suit itself, but the attitude that the company conveys where appearances are more important than functionality.

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Rules exist to be broken. – User May 23 at 13:33
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vote up 14 vote down

Is there a dress code for "dress-down Friday"?

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Once worked at a place where they implemented a "No Blue Jeans" rule for casual Friday because they thought the outfits one of their young ladies wore on Fridays were too provocative and thus unprofessional. The problem was it wasn't her pants (blue jeans or otherwise) which were so provocative, but her very low-cut tops! – PTBNL May 27 at 18:31
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Or is there a need for a "dress-down" Friday? – Tim May 28 at 16:37
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Do you have naked fridays? – Martin Beckett May 29 at 18:08
vote up 14 vote down

Have you upgraded to Fortran 77 yet?

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May backfire if the answer is something like "No, we're still on Fortran II". – Spoike May 27 at 12:12
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Are you obliged to participate in the company's "must" events?

We had to perform a City-rally, according to the predefined plan, make photos of predefined objects, find out questions to specific answers and be in time for evening restaurant (cheap bar, I only got a cup of coffee). It's either I miss something or I'm glad I'm not German.

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this sounds like a perfect day - compared what our "must" events are. sitting in a boring room listeling to company jingles about 4 hours hearing praise for the sales people, although they are not there. – Andreas Petersson May 23 at 14:59
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Then again, why would you work in a place where you wouldn't want to participate? Such events can, undeniably, improve 'togetherness' and whatnot within the company. (Or have I just been exceptionally lucky to work in places where you can actually have fun with the coworkers? Well, at least later into the evening, with the booze flowing etc...) – Jonik May 23 at 20:28
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I'm with Jonik on this. How fun an event is depends on the company culture, if it is rather repressive then the events tend to become something you will be happy to miss. If the culture is one having great co-workers and work environment then the event tend to become something you'll be happy to participate wether it'll be as simple as an afterwork at a pub to a training trip with the company. – Spoike May 27 at 12:43
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vote up 13 vote down

Do management judge projects by their costs only and are unable to judge them by their value earned?

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