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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I would argue against private offices, I would promote more of an open office concept with "war rooms" so that the the newb's can quickly ask a more experienced person quickly & easily. But keep the rooms smaller, five or less people. Also, dual or triple monitors is a must. |
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casual dress |
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Perks that I have liked: 1) a book budget to get technical books related and unrelated to the job 2) assigned mentor - someone more senior to help show me the ropes and tell me about the culture 3) pop/snack area with minimal (better is no cost) to staff 4) notebook,wifi and lounge where you can be more relaxed when you arent coding hard but still working on things like email. our company has 4 of them than you can pick up in the lounge and curl up on the couch and read mail etc during lunch or during an unwind time 5) budget for movie tickets, dinner out etc. to give to staff after they have done a grinder or delivered a key element on time - anything to make them feel special and remembered for hard work |
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Perks?
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I suggest reading these excellent articles from "Joel on Software" blog: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000043.html - 12 Steps to Better Code http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/BionicOffice.html - Bionic Office http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000040.html - How do You Compensate Programmers? http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/FindingGreatDevelopers.html - Finding Great Developers There are more by Joel, very specific to office layout and working conditions for developers, anyone knows? |
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Offices and fancy chairs are overrated. Responsibility, visibility and the opportunity to work on something cool and learn are critical to getting and retaining young developers to a non-established company. Fresh out of school, working on something impressive or world-changing was way more important than almost anything else. Making work feel like college will help keep them in the office more hours, but it won't keep a young hot-shot developer working on dialog boxes for an internal insurance company application. Also, money, lots of money, never hurts. |
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In my opinion, the best perk a new programmer can have is a good mentor who is extremely knowledgeable and understanding. |
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Two words: Starting salary. It determines how much money you will make for the majority of your career. |
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I think private offices are overated, especially for junior developers. OTH managers must understand that every time a developer is distracted by noise, people walking around them, or being in a huge bullpen or a sea of cheap cubes that it costs the firm money in the near term. Good work areas, especially good chairs and monitors, make a huge difference. Any kind of dress code beyond 'naughty bits must be covered' is insane when applied to developers. Having non-flexible work hours is insane when applied to developers. In general what is known in management theory as 'Taylorism' is a good way to drive away the best developers. All developers, especially junior developers, appreciate formal training opportunities. |
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Shower on the premises, so that employees can jog/cycle to work. |
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As a college student hoping to enter the programming field I would really love to find a place that would offer me a chance to grow. So here is what I would love to see: 1) A great chair. I like supportive, comfortable chairs. However, nothing too comfortable like a La-z-boy chair. 2) A mentor or hero who could lend me advice when I need it, hugs and praise when I've earned it, and a gentle push when I am falling behind. 3) Food. Eating a proper meal and being as healthy as I can would be really nice if it fit into work. 4) Schwag. Company shirts, logos, bumper-stickers, etc. Good luck. |
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Good working environment, competitive compensation, and the ability to do research and development. |
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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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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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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! 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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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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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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Being a college student who would go for job in a few short years, I'd say it's definitely
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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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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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These are all personal :-).
I don't care about:
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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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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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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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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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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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Matthew 7:12
Mohammed
Confucius - Analects XV.24
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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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