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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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vote up 71 vote down
  • Give them each a budget and let them configure their own computer setup. Make them submit a plan for what they intend to purchase. Talk over the plan with them. It will be a great way to kick things off.

  • Give them a budget for a cell phone and unlimited plan that the company will pay for.

  • Pay for their home Internet service.

Little things like these they will show their friends to the response of, "Cool - I wish my company did that!"

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I don't want Internet paid for. Then they could claim everything I did anywhere on the Internet was company property. Screw that. – jmucchiello Jan 24 at 10:48
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I also wouldn't want a company to pay for my internet access. They might feel like they have a right to decide what company/plan I subscribe to, and what I can do with it. – Joshua Carmody Feb 5 at 19:15
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Just pay me more and let me choose. Then I can decide the provider and services I want as well as not risk the company trying to claim rights to code I wrote on my own hardware, at home, on my own time. – Matthew Whited Jun 12 at 15:14
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The access to training and mentors. The things that Junior developers want is pretty much what every programmer that I know wants. They want to work in a relaxed and flexible environment with people who are at least as smart as them if not smarter. They want to feel like they are a part of something. They want to constantly be learning.

Make sure that you have a training/book budget. Make sure that they are always learning and always have something interesting to work on. Make sure that you do team building or some kind of thing like that on a fairly regular bases. Lunch and learns are an increasingly popular tool these days.

One thing that Junior Developers might like more than more Senior developers is the use of cutting edge or even bleeding edge technology. Be careful about this one, cause it can byte you in the butt, but it always helps.

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Good hardware: I'd be very interested if I was told that I would get a desktop system (WinXP is still my system of choice) and a Linux server box. Something I have root on and can run services on (local at a minimum, world visible would be nice.) A Virtual private server in the company data center instead of dedicated hardware would also work.

Another thing that would be nice would be access to good references: "We will buy you any books that are apropos to your job!" same with software to some point, "if it's under $60, we will just get it."

Edit: large screenS on pivot stands, good chairs, white boards, etc.

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vote up 46 vote down

Philip Greenspun wrote about this once. He suggested making the office a better place to be than home, which is easier for young programmers. For example, domestic hardware that someone living alone cannot justify: expensive coffee machine, pool table, huge TV with DVDs to watch.

Make the office more sociable: put beer in the fridge and have a drink together at the end of the day. Provide better food (easy for people who can't cook): get deli deliveries or a caterer.

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We only have 15 employees, and we have tested the beer on nearly all of them. – Peter Hilton Feb 2 at 23:29
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Isn't beer an insurance liability? I'm from the UK originally, so I'll drink at any opportunity. I can't believe it's frowned upon over here in North America to have a beer over lunch. +1 for the beer! – BenAlabaster Apr 2 at 0:14
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My team meets for a beer (regular or root) in the office once or twice a week for the past eight years, usually for a half hour to an hour. It's always the leaf nodes in the organization - mostly dev and test - and while it's totally informal and relaxed we get a lot of problems hashed out. It helps the new people get comfortable with us. Somebody just has to take the corporate amex card to costco once a month to restock the fridge, and it is well worth it. – fatcat1111 Apr 27 at 18:20
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The opportunity to work alongside experienced programmers.

And also the possibility of learn from them.

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Flexible Schedule

Good PTO Program

Fun & Exciting Technology/Toys

Relaxed Work Atmosphere


A great idea would be to let all your devs design their own workspaces. Different people need different environments to be productive.

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vote up 59 vote down

Two flat-screen monitors, an optical mouse -- two things I don't currently have -- and each their own whiteboard with a few markers.

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You're using a ball mouse? What is this? 1998? – shoosh Sep 19 '08 at 0:53
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Jeff Atwood suggests that a keyboard and mouse are basic tools you should own yourself: codinghorror.com/blog/archives/… (see point three) – Aydsman Sep 19 '08 at 1:18
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be flexible about the starting hour.

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I can't count the amount of clients that have complained at me that I don't get in early enough when I stroll in at 10am instead of 7:30am like other departments. Why don't they understand that programmers are nocturnal? – BenAlabaster Apr 2 at 0:29
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Yeah, this is priceless for me. I can avoid the rush hour commute, which on London's tube system is quite painful, especially in summer. – JeeBee Jul 15 at 11:50
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vote up 109 vote down

I always love going to conferences and training and consider that a perk. Not all companies pay to have their devs continue to learn. There's always more to learn. You benefit because they are learning more. They benefit from that too, but also have fun and get away from things for a couple of days and get to mingle with other devs.

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I personally like the office my company gave me.

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vote up 131 vote down

The opportunity to work alongside experienced programmers.

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I think having good challenges and learning opportunities is critical. That's true when you're above the junior level too.

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