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I intend on hiring 2-3 junior programmers right out of college. Aside from cash, what is the most important perk for a young programmer? Is it games at work? I want to be creative... I want some good ideas

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"what be creative", I was going to edit that, but I have no idea whet you were going for there. – James McMahon Apr 27 at 18:58
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Shouldn't this be tagged subjective? I'd personally do away with "perks". What purpose would a "perks" tag have? – Daniel Jul 15 at 11:32
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132 Answers

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Help them to research all the time in the research interest's of technology leading corporations and new technologies to help them acquire a good knowledge about breakthroughs, discoveries, new tools, etc, and be more creative about their work, just don't make them feel like they don't learn innovative stuff in their environment. Also give them the liberty to finish their programming tasks without restricting them to sit for 8 hours in front of a computer every day. Lockheed Martin gives their employees the liberty to work any time they want if they complete their 40 hours a week.

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From my perspective the most important thing the job has to enable the employee is the personal growth. Find time to discuss about work and if possible provide them a mentor.

Beside this:

  • flexible schedule
  • drink
  • food
  • pleasant working environment
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To add to the list: snacks, and not sugar stuff, but actual energy food, fruits, oats, cheese, salad, sandwiches. May be a pain to set up, but if I had that, I'd be spending more time at work :)

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One of these would get me interested:

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  • Quality chairs. A developer spends a lot of time during the day sitting. While a good quality adjustable chair may seem expensive, it's cheaper than having a developer miss work because their back is injured from sitting in an Office Depot $79 special.
  • In office catering. It doesn't have to be covered by the company, but having a secretary make a lunch run for the office is a great benefit. Not only does it enable the developer to work through their lunch, if they need/ want to, but it helps cut down on that time lost before lunch where everyone tries to coordinate about who's going where.
  • Dual monitors, or one large(30"+) high resolution widescreen format LCD. The productivity gain from having multiple monitors is amazing. Imagine a secretary having to work in an office with only a single file cabinet with just one drawer. That's what development on a single 17" 4:3 aspect ratio monitor is like.
  • Quiet. Even if you can't afford private offices for the developers, providing the developers with a space separate from marketing and people whose jobs are to talk to your customer base, or the sales team is very important to a developer. A developer has chosen to work with computers, and not people, because they are likely not an extrovert. Therefore, keeping them sheltered from the sales team's pep-talks and team building exercises will be very valuable. If you have to have a giant open floor plan for the entire business, look at getting some banners or sound dampening to hang from the ceiling.
  • Respect. Your developers are building the tools that your company uses to be more profitable. They may be making the software you sell, or the software that gives your company the advantage you need to be competitive, treat them with respect.
  • Books. Developers need knowledge like plants need water. If a developer isn't given an outlet to learn new techniques and practices, they will search for it themselves. Give your developers a quarterly library fund, or have a company library they can get books from, and request new books be added to. You can create an internal website which the developers can vote for new additions to the library with, and buy them once a quarter. A subscription to an online library resource like Safaribooks.com
  • A sense of being appreciated. You chose to hire these particular developers for a reason. Make them feel like they are special in some way. Have a quarterly/ monthly guest speaker, as you can afford it. If you can't afford a guest speaker, send some of them to conferences and workshops. Rotate your developers through conferences, so that everyone has the opportunity to go.
  • Managers who understand what is involved in developing software. Developing software is not the same thing as digging a ditch or laying bricks. A developer will not spend 8/8 hours writing code. Plenty of time will be spent on research, whether requirements gathering/ clarification, or on the right approach to solve a particular problem. In physical engineering, prototypes and stepwise refinement are part of the iterative development of a product. The same is true in software. Just because the final check-in for a task is only a few text files, doesn't mean that the developer didn't spend a lot of effort refining that feature or bug fix.
  • Guidance. As a recent college grad, your new developers are going to need someone who's been around to guide them to the correct technologies and practices to use to increase their value, both for the company and for themselves.
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Substantial times of uninterrupted peace and quiet to get into that highly productive state of "flow" while programming. A noisy office drives productivity down at least 50%.

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casual dress will have to be up on the list for me.

i used to work for an employer who would on occasion stock our department mini fridge with caffine (in our senerio it was Mountain Dew).

the most important thing to me was chemistry. having coworkers that were intellegent enough to bounce ideas off of but social enough where we could invite each other to bar bq's.

finally, i think being comfortable. i think the casual dress is a small preface to this, however, good chairs, good screens, performing machines, lowest stress conditions possible. being a developer deadlines are already enough to stress out about.

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Anything with caffene in it should be free. Coffee, lattee, candy bars, soda (especially Mountain Dew) etc.

Seriously though, ask anyone who has worked in a place like Microsoft where they have great break rooms close by and they will tell you that they can be a godsend when working late etc.

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Free headphones (good around-the-ear phones from Sennheiser or even Bose, maybe even noise-canceling ones)!

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Some of these have been mentioned before, while others seem to have been skipped over...

  • A bluetooth headset - preferably one that multi-pairs with my desk phone and my cell phone and lets me listen to music in stereo. Less is more, right? I don't want to have to keep switching headsets to answer different phones or listen to my music, and I definitely don't want to have to hold the receiver while I try and continue my daily work - and I don't want half a dozen gadgets cluttering up my desk, the fewer the better.
  • O'Reilly Subscription - I think this costs me $40 a month which I'd rather not pay for myself, but I refuse to live without it, so I do.
  • MSDN License - The one with all the nifty stuff like Expression Studio, Visual Studio Team Edition etc. This currently costs me a small fortune, it would be nice if it came as a perk of my job!
  • Software - Don't give me hassle about purchasing software that will make me more productive when I ask - XmlSpy, Icon Workshop, Resharper/CodeRush just buy it and bring it to me when it arrives, the small amount of $$$ it costs, by the time you've wasted a half hour of my time having me write up justification and you've wasted another 10 minutes reading it, we've just spent more than the cost of the software.
  • Flex Time/Telecommuting - If I arrive late, chances are I didn't leave until late last night, don't quiz me like a five year old where I was at 8:30 when everyone else arrived! Where were you and everyone else at 2am when I left?
  • Give me leeway to be myself. Putting my feet on my own desk is perfectly acceptable behaviour, as is listening to music, eating, having pop on my desk etc. As long as I'm not disturbing anyone else's workflow and I'm meeting all my deadlines/objectives, that's all that matters.
  • Home internet connection and VPN privileges - for those work from home days.
  • Time to think - without questioning what I'm doing "instead of working" - we're programmers, thinking is working, what's more, that's what you pay us for.
  • Bookshelf - for all my books
  • Books - to put on said bookshelf.
  • No micromanaging - I'm an adult, I don't need micromanaging! Give me a task and some kind of idea of the direction you want me to take and leave me to do what you hired me for. If you wanted to do the job yourself, be my guest I can always find something else to do. If I need help, I'll ask.
  • A forum for answering questions/learning
  • Training/Seminars/Further Education (i.e. Masters Degrees, PHd's etc)
  • Life Insurance Policy
  • Stock Options
  • RRSP/401K
  • Occasional Team Building Days - Sailing, War Games, Paintball, whatever you like

And if you wanted to throw in a couple of nice personal perks:

  • Gym Membership
  • Golf Club Membership
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If I were to pick a few perks (as a junior developer) that would make me switch companies:

  • Games in the lunchroom, so you can play a bit during morning and afternoon breaks
  • Comfortable chair instead of "whatever the leasing company gives us"
  • Fridge stocked with beverages
  • Getting to order whatever programming books I need
  • Non-tolerance for incompetent developers
  • Company-sponsored team activities like paintball, lasertag, etc.
  • Getting to be around good developers my own age
  • Sponsored gym membership
  • Flexible starting hours
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I just entered the job market and landed with a company where the hours (with the exception of occasional deadlines) are 9-5, 3 weeks vacation to start, and free lunch monday - thursday from different restaurants. This beat the other places that essentially said they would treat me like dirt and have me work long hours. The hours and benefits allow me to maintain a very healthy work/life balance, and this makes me more productive at work.

Oh yeah, and dual monitors rock.

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  • bright colleagues
  • interesting challenges
  • flexitime
  • freedom to fail (if you never fail, you're not being challenged enough)
  • freedom to innovate (i.e. an organisation that doesn't stonewall ideas from juniors)
  • Google-style 20% time -- or something similar
  • the sense that attending conferences and education is encouraged, not merely allowed
  • casual dress code
  • dining facilities on site or very nearby

I would suggest that working from should not be the norm for junior hires - they need face to face contact in order to become part of the team. It's good if they have the facilities to work from in order to do out of hours work, or have occasional home days.

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vote up 16 vote down

Matthew 7:12

Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets.

Mohammed

The most righteous of men is the one who is glad that men should have what is pleasing to himself, and who dislikes for them what is for him disagreeable

Confucius - Analects XV.24

Never impose on others what you would not choose for yourself.

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Scripture in StackOverflow? I'm impressed! +1 – MrValdez Jan 25 at 1:18
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  • Gym Membership
  • Video Games
  • Dual Monitors
  • 4 weeks+ of vacation
  • Flexible starting hour
  • If no private office then noise cancelling headphones.

And MOST importantly other people their age to work with.

When you are 22-23 years old it is really hard to relate to your coworkers when they are all talking about their kids/families.

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  • Independence , and a feeling that their Inputs matter
  • Work From Home
  • Allow for Personal work at Office (initially there might be lot of wasteage of time , Slowly it will come down automatically)
  • Casual Dress code
  • Laptops and Not workstations
  • Creative projects
  • Allow them to Work on Other things not limited by Work Profile (Like a new programmer wold cherish the idea of having the liberty to directly interact with the Clients and Understand / Solve Problems)

All this would be grt for them , And would think twice before leaving as they would feel suck would place would not be available elsewhere.

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vote up 1 vote down

I'm a current college student, graduating in about a year, and the only thing that matters is respect. Money, hours, aeron chairs, multiple moniters, admin rights to your own computer, private office, telecommuting rights, these all represent the same thing: the employer views you as a real employee. Clock ins, lowball offers, drug tests, cubicle farms, folding chairs, ect., these all represent the opposite: the employer views you as a stupid little kid.

The most intelligent and hardworking graduates are probably not as interested in the free soft drinks and game lounges as they are in the idea that they will be viewed as important contributors, both to your company and the field of software engineering at large.

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Well, working on challenging and interesting projects, being respected and not being ignored (some junior developers are just forgotten in a corner of the office) can be better than throwing them games and gadgets.

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Subscription to Safari Library Books Online. Unlimited access to all their books and those of partner publishers, never goes out of date, searchable, training videos, and notes you make are kept forever, even through subscription lapses.

By the way, not all fresh-out-of-college programmers are young, nor are they male. Most are, I grant; but not all. :)

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vote up 4 vote down

These are all personal :-).

  1. Free coffee. I have solved countless problems while waiting for my coffee to finish, or even walking to the coffee vending machine.
  2. Laptops. I don't care about fancy dual monitor setups everyone keeps mentioning because I usually end up working on only one of them anyway. However, having a laptop and being able to work from any part of the company more valuable to me. I can just take my problem with me and it makes it easier for me do demonstrate what is going on to a college.
  3. Smoking area. I smoke, and although I don't smoke that much, it's really nice to actually spend five minutes somewhere else. The most interesting discussions I have with peers are usually while smoking.
  4. Open office. I don't like to sit in an office, by myself, for a prolonged length of time because it makes me feel like a machine. To me, interaction with peers is a huge motivation to go to work.
  5. Whiteboard and artistic people around. If there are any webdesigners, 3d modelers, sound guys or whatever type of artsy people you can find; put them in the same room as the programming / tech guys. This too makes the job seem less mechanical.
  6. No dress code. I'll quit the day someone will try to make me wear a suit. They honestly don't make me feel comfortable, besides that, I probably wouldn't fit in such a formal culture anyway. Besides that, I'm a pierced up coding 'goth' that delivers the best work when I don't have to worry about something other than code. That include clothing.
  7. Learning opportunity. Doesn't matter what, it could be seminars, peer reviews, book, 'research time', anything goes.
  8. If the job requires concurrent programming: a dual core machine at least.
  9. A stash of ritalin, lol.

I don't care about:

  1. Dual monitor setups. As stated previously; they distract me so, I tend to prefer widescreens.
  2. Fast hardware; it hard these days to actually get slow hardware these days.
  3. Gadgets.
  4. Free internet at home, or a cell phone. I already have those.
  5. The editor, IDE or OS I have to use as long as I can figure out how to work with it in an hour or two (it usually takes less time though).
  6. Huge paychecks. Give me a pleasant working environment where I'm happy to be for the biggest part of the week and I'm happier than when I have a huge pile of money stashed away at the bank. Use that cash to improve the office conditions.
  7. Game rooms, guitars, pooltables, foosball or airhockey tables et cetera.
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Simply follow Jeff Atwood's (PBUH) Programmer's Bill of Rights and they will come.

It doesn't hurt to provide abundant caffeination infrastructure as well :)

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In any environment in which programmers don't maintain their own equipment and IT does, making sure that IT helps rather than hinders the programmer. Either a group of IT admins that support programmers as their main responsibility, or a dedicated admin for programmers.

Few things can be more frustrating than having to wait hours or days for simple tech tasks to be completed.

(Of course, it should go without saying that programmers must have root/local admin privileges on their own workstations.)

Another thing: make the day 1 setup for a new programmer a thorough thing. Not something where it takes a day to get their account set up, another day for e-mail to be created, etc. Ideally, everything is set up for them (and tested to work!) so they can then plunge in, start reading source code, start receiving training from their mentors, etc.

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Being a college student who would go for job in a few short years, I'd say it's definitely

  • Casual dress code

    -- why does my dress matter when I can program good enough?

  • Mentoring -- some older, wiser programmers to guide you. I'd just have been out of college, used to having a professor around the corner or a TA to throw questions at.

  • Friendly/productive atmosphere

    -- I'd like to have people who will discuss codes after their job and not make me go to really stupid meetings that don't get things done.

  • Boss that understands programming

    -- I've been surrounded by all CS people who think in similar ways and understand me. I'd want to have a boss to be similar.

  • Gym/Fitness membership... -- It just helps to vent off pressue of programming..

  • Some resources to work on own projects

    -- I would want to do some of my own things, even after office hours if required.. I'd be glad to use to company resources.

  • Please please, root on my PC.. or admin

    -- I know what I do, please give me rights..

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vote up 6 vote down

I can't get past the fact that new programmers should be paying us until they've learned enough to make themselves useful.

In medieval times, you had to beg and bribe your way into an apprenticeship at a guild, and then you had to haul firewood on your back for 30 years before the Master would even let you look at an anvil.

Overpaying junior programmers makes as much sense as small-market NBA teams drafting high school players. The money gives them an ego which blinds them to their lack of knowledge, and by the time they figure out how to be useful, they declare free agency and they're gone.

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Besides money, the greatest attraction for a new developer would be an experience that will allow him/her to build his career on strong footings. A developer can get this experience by working in an environment that will allow him to learn, improve, strive to achieve challenges, where 'quality' (of code, documents, etc) has some value, where best practices are followed, where people look for a better solution and most important point is - No internal politics.

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vote up 5 vote down

Apart from the hard stuff like offices, tools, gear, food and snack I'd like to add something that makes me feel special:

Let your developers in on decisions!
If you're getting new tools for them, or moving or starting a new project or even hiring new people -let your developers in on those decisions. It's only fair you get a say in who your new coworker is or what the next big thing you are going to work for a few years on.

One way to do this is to conduct meetings in a round table fashion where you specifically ask every attending person for their opinion, not just let them speak up if they wish.

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Lay out the metrics by which their work will be evaluated.

Then, let them know that they have time and geographical flexibility where they may opt to work from home several days a week (with prior approval of the lead programmer).

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  1. Trust, it might not sound like much but when your just starting out in the field the notion that you take them and their skills seriously, and are going to provide useful feedback can be enormously satisfying.

  2. Training & Certification is a huge plus, it can often make Jr. Programmers feel likes your investing in them. It also helps weed out folks that view programming more as a hobby or something they feel into as opposed to a career.

  3. I really liked the idea of building my own system on a budget above. Its an interesting idea and I think it would attract people, it certainly would me.

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Having worked at some &#!t jobs I have found that one of the nicest things is a training program. Just expecting somebody to pick up the job and be swimming in the first week can be exceptionally frustrating. If you set aside X amount of time and have them up to speed as to how things are done in the work place they feel a lot less out of place when they have to tackle the real issues.

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vote up 1 vote down
  • Free coffee
  • Good nearby food
  • Well stacked library
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