How to utilize programmers effectively when they don’t have Enough Work?
closed as off topic by casperOne♦ Mar 11 at 13:17
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Have them educate themselves. Allow them to work on experimental projects that will allow them to learn and evaluate new technologies and new methods. Unless there is actual work to be done on improving the existing code base. |
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Get them to pay back some Technical Debt. You could have them look to first get any legacy code covered by a decent set of unit tests. Then you can get into the game of refactoring. In addition to that, once you've got that safety blanket of the unit tests, you should then be able to look at performance tuning too. Recommend you look at either using the profiler that's build into Visual Studio if you have the right version or getting your hands on something like dotTrace or ANTS Profiler. |
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Have them paint your house. |
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testing and refactoring? |
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Spend some time on build/deployment tools. You should be aiming to have a One Step Build, or in the case of web-apps, One Step Deployment. |
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They always can improve performance. Somewhere in that app, there is a slow, fat rat waiting to get whacked with a good piece of opti-mice-ation. |
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I can think of a number of things (some already mentioned but included for completeness) Work on V. Next Try and get a headstart on the next release by working on some features from that version. Adding unit tests You can always have better tests or additional coverage. Improve the existing code Look at ways you can make the existing code simpler, fixing bugs, making the code more robust through refactoring, better patterns, comments, reducing the cyclomatic complexity Improve the supportability work on installers, support docs, help files, knowledge bases anything that can save time and money later. R&D Are you on the latest version of your frameworks and supporting platform? If not now might be the time to investigate and upgrade. |
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Excellent answers have been given here. But I may add what most of them implied: Why don't you ask your developer what they think they could do to improve your existing softwares ? Often, developers have great ideas but they don't have the time to implement and test them. Examples of things I would love to do if only I had the time:
Etc, etc, etc. All the best. Sylvain. |
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Just tell them! |
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Research completely different technology stacks. Learn from them. I've worked in Window shops where I installed Cygwin (a Linux emulator) on my laptop. Introduced my colleagues to the notion of what you can do on a commmand-line. I currently work in a (mostly) Linux shop, where on my Windows laptop I have installed SQL Server and Visual Studio. |
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Having your coders work on your code would suggest there still is work, it's just work that was initially skipped. If the code, documentation etc. are in good enough shape for you, extra work just tends to be tedious for the programmers so I wouldn't tell them to keep on improving it. And besides, if they do, you also need to utilize your testers, and if they do have work, well, suddenly your programmers are costing money possibly for very little return. A better thing would be to have them work on something else, there's bound to be projects that never got started or finished due to lack of resources or have them learn something new. Ask what (work-related) they would be interested in, and see if you can come up with some useful project and if these interests could benefit the company. If not, you could suggest something that do. For instance, there could be new technologies that need evaluation. What better than have a few of your programmers try it out and write a report? Then you'd know the pros and cons and the company could decide if the new technology is worth pursuing. Educating your personnel is always a good idea if done correctly. Scripting languages, for instance, are usually not very well known but some skill in them can make your programmers a lot more productive. Do it right and the company is in a much better shape when work is available again and your programmers will be a lot more motivated. |
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There is always something that can be improved, refined, refactored, |
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People mentioned refactoring which I completely agree with, in a different way I would say: Have them delete some code. I always say, the best part of being a programmer is deleting crappy old code. :) |
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(Disclaimer: I'm speaking as a developer turned QA, so this may be from a slightly different point of view) That really depends on your company situation and management mentality. Speaking from my own experience: Don't tell your bosses otherwise you'll be facing an immediate head-count reduction! Don't extend your unit testing phase to ridiculous proprtions. You're probably under pressure to get that bug count down or share of the bugs found by you up. but you're stealing work from the QA team if you do it that way, and they'll forever hate you for it. Just remember that a good QA team can watch your back... or stab you in it. Do plan for and spend more time on documentation. Programmers do not exist in a vacuum, and other people rely on their design and functional specs to do their job properly. We all hate doing documentation, but this is often criminally overlooked and makes QA a nightmare. Do spend more time on training! It'll pay back in quality of code and reduced stress for the team leads. |
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Answer questions on SO. Clearly Jon Skeet doesn't have enough work to do :-) |
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This only happens once in a blue moon so when it does the developers need to GO TO THE PUB!!! |
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Google gives their programmers "20% time", 1 day a week to work on anything they see fit. The majority of Google's highly successful products have spawned from this 1 day. If your programmers are idle, why not offer them something similar? |
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There is always room for improvement in the code. Just be sure not to break anything. |
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I think that there is never a break for programmers, there alway remains a consequent need to update the skill sets and dive into more programming challenges to make out some results. its more like heuristics, in that when a person comes by a problem, maybe in the "spare time", he would have done something similar so he can go about programming without a second thought. So i think studying more code, practising code, improving software programming concepts and all the same enjoying it, because if a person doesnt enjoy, he cant learn much. so learn at ur own pace but not completely stop. because as vibrant as water can be if it remain stagnant, it will smell and loose its beauty. similarly is a programmer, there can be extra time if we think of our jobs as just jobs, but if we think of them as a job and a hobby, well all the better. |
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Send them to StackOverflow. There's always something they can pick up here that applies to what they have been working on, and to what they will be working on in the future. All types of internal education is good for both the individual and for the company. |
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Library code: I've always maintained a list things I wanted coding in a generic way and added to a set of library classes.
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If your programmers don't have enough code to write for you, then you've got too many programmers. Take the executioner's axe to them. Never mind if they have mortgages, cars, children and wives, you do what's best for the company, and what's best for the company is to walk through that development floor with a purpose, leaving only death in destruction in your wake. You need to make sure you work on your evil genius laugh. When you're handing that developer his pink slip, and he looks at you and asks, tears welling in his eyes, "what am I supposed to do now?" You cross your arms, look down upon him and spit out, "that's not my problem!" Here is where that evil laugh comes in play as you walk away knowing that he is now a shell of himself, his heart filled with soul-crushing disappointment. Code cleanup, refactoring, R&D and Education. Make them busy by making both your existing code bases and your employees better at what they do. |
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If you happen to be a developer with too little work, by all means you should improve your existing code quality by refactoring, adding unit tests, improving usability, increasing performance and so on. And you should learn new tools and technologies. But also be sure to ask yourself the hard questions, such as "Is this just temporary?" and "How is my company doing financially?": maybe you need to update your resume and work on your professional network too. |
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Education in several areas, over time I have been reading up on developmentmethods, new technologies, new products and so on. It's expected by my company that I keep getting wiser to help make everything run more efficiently and on the ball at all time. |
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