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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

vote up 0 vote down

An office kitchen

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vote up 6 vote down

Give them the choice of tools as far as possible. I know it's not always possible, but I guess there is nothing more demotivating than forcing a Linux guy to use Windows, a MAC Guy to use Windows, or a Windows Guy to use Linux.

Of course that's not always possible, but also what about favourite email clients? Some love thunderbird, others outlook and others mutt.

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vote up 23 vote down

I'm surprised the cynics amongst us haven't said 'non brain-dead leadership'!

Attracting young people with toys is a bit patronising, better to say:

"Yeah so we could offer you lots of new shiny toys, but how about we guarantee you no PHBs instead?"

;-)

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If you actually tell them at the interview that you don't have brain dead leadership, they'd probably not believe you - if they do they're insufficiently cyncical to survive and you don't want them ;) Better to demonstrate your quality leadership by not having stupid policies like dress codes. – Mark Baker Sep 30 '08 at 15:01
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Attracting programmers with toys might be patronizing, but when you've got all the toys sitting on your desk, who cares? :P – BenAlabaster Apr 2 at 0:26
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vote up 1 vote down

Experience with experienced programmers. Games, free food, free massages, are just gimmicks (cough google cough)

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vote up 1 vote down

I'm a new programmer myself. Things I found useful at my last internship are dual monitors (or a really wide one, good to look up things AND look at code at the same time), admin rights on my own box, flexible hours (really important one, put me at ease not having to worry about emergencies/appointments/talking to manager for those and the like). I also loved how my manager/supervisor would never look over my shoulder...feels easier to code that way. Also, our tools server had some free and tested (for our particular environment) programs like folder diff, tool to view method signatures in assemblies, etc. They help everyone but are especially handy to new developers.

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vote up 2 vote down

Casual dress code Free pop (This was one that I really liked back in the dot-com days and miss it sooo much) Flextime and telecommuting Configure there own machine w/dual monitors and a budget Benefits like health care, dental and vision - Some of us like being able to get a discount on glasses or having our teeth checked.

I would also suggest making sure there is a clear process for how work will be done as junior programmers may not necessarily be aware of all the best practices and what kind of environment you want to give them.

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vote up 11 vote down
  • Casual dress code and office environment
  • Flexible hours
  • Allow listening to music while working (earphones allowed)
  • Multi-monitor/powerful workstations
  • Skilled/experienced co-workers/bosses
  • Code reviews done by those co-workers/bosses
  • Being able to work on creative projects that they come up with, and having them reviewed by those skilled co-workers/bosses (Most valuable perk!)
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vote up 3 vote down

Speaking as an actual college student (senior), here's some things I'd like:

A degree of direction (tell me what you need done)

A degree of autonomy (trust me to get it done)

I'm probably unusual among my peers in that I prefer professionalism. As a general rule of thumb, I think casual dress would be very helpful, though it wouldn't be a huge issue for me personally.

But really, the big thing is trust, and letting me do what you're paying me to do. If I think I'm going to be stuck attending constant meetings and always worrying about office politics, that's a big strike against you. Competence is also very important... I don't know if I could work for a manager who knew nothing about programming. I understand that it's entirely likely a great manager might not even be as good a programmer as I am, but they should at least know enough to know what's feasible and what's not.

Oh, and probably the biggest thing for me: Long term prospects. I hate job hunting, and I'd tolerate an otherwise-mildly intolerable job if I knew that I wasn't likely to be laid off, out-sourced, etc.

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vote up 1 vote down

In addition to what has been said, make sure you have them work on stuff that has impact on the business. If they feel that you value their work as a core part of your business, they might become much more engaged in their projects. If they do, that's the kind of developers you want full time.

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vote up 22 vote down

Invite your whole team to the restaurant of their choice every Friday for lunch. A former boss of mine used to do just that and it really helped team bonding.

If budget doesn't allow it, you can do it once every two weeks or once a month. But think of the value of having closer team members.

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Twelve o'clock Tuesday Tasty Tacos 'n Team Talk? – Zack Peterson Sep 19 '08 at 16:43
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vote up 4 vote down

Good project management - with minimal BS and meetings under control

Good technical mentoring

Book reimbursement, resources, tools

And I take issue with the "aside from cash"

I think cash isn't really ranked up that high unless the environment is so poor - that's why they call it compensation.

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vote up 2 vote down

When I was just starting out, I benefited greatly from the mentoring of others in the office. It helped a lot, and I viewed it as a serious perk -- I was often quoted as, "I'm getting paid to learn!"

There are all the trivialities (games in the office, DVDs, etc.) -- I think that while they make for a great interview carrot, they're not a reason said programmers will stay. Indeed, once their work ramps up, they'll probably realize they have little time for those "perks" and wonder why the company even bothers.

As a junior, learning from someone who respects you, is able to teach you and is able to lead you is very enticing long-term. It may not have the interview sex appeal that the others do, but it's something I think all serious developers did appreciate (or would have appreciated, if they didn't get it).

Sponsor a corporate-wide subscription to Safari. Allow a junior dev to take 2 or 3 hours a day learning. Make him feel valued. Let him contribute.

Which is another biggie: Make him feel like part of the team, and give him projects which not only interest him, but also challenge him. Too often, the junior dev gets the jobs like "move control X to the lower right corner," or "write all the property routines" (or getters/setters in Java/Obj-C/et al), or "add javascript validation." Give him something to do which makes him feel useful, like a real contributor. He'll appreciate that, too -- and probably become more passionate about your firm and your practices.

(BTW, my use of "him" is not meant to be sexist; it's just a shorthand. Please expand it to "him/her" mentally.)

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vote up 10 vote down

My company has purchased an O'Reilly Safari Online account for each of our developers. I have access to thousands of books online at any time.

We also have training videos available at online from CBT Nuggets but I find their content limited.

Also, some productivity tools, for Visual Studio, such as CodeRush/Refactor Pro or Resharper

Quality Coffee in-house.

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vote up 17 vote down

Actually, Joel Spolsky has a really good article on this subject that I refer to from time to time:

Joel on Attracting Developers

EDIT: I read Joel's book on hiring devs, Smart and Gets Things Done. In the book, he says that this article is an embarassing bubble-era relic and he has learned a lot since then. I don't think the blog post is all bad, but it's true that the book is a lot more sophisticated.

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vote up 0 vote down

I won't claim this is the most important perk, but I know of a company that has season tickets to all the local sports teams, and employees can use the tickets for free on a rotating basis. It's pretty popular.

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vote up 136 vote down
  • Admin rights to their PCs
  • An internet connection that's not gimped by bizzaro proxy rules
  • Dual Monitors
  • Work from home privileges
  • A soda fountain (not a drinking fountain that dispenses soda instead of water ala Brawndo, but like you'd use at the Taco Bell to refill your drink)

    soda fountain

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ELECTROLYTES!!!!! – Jeff Atwood Sep 19 '08 at 13:23
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Great point on Admin rights - would have never thought of that! Nothing more crippling than not being able to install productivity tools... – agartzke Sep 20 '08 at 16:50
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Free Coke might seem like a good perk - but it's not doing your staff any favours in the health department. Healthy brains are more productive brains! – slim Dec 19 '08 at 11:52
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admin rights - this seems so basic that I'd question the sense of companies that deny it - I'd assume that either the staff was mostly incompetent or that the management was paranoid - But this is like demanding that chairs be clean - if you've got to ask for this you've got bigger problems. – Steve B. Dec 30 '08 at 23:01
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I'd agree with free healthy drinks, like orange juice, and a selection of herbal teas, but not easily accessible junk. – Andrei Taranchenko Apr 12 at 3:32
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vote up 4 vote down

The chance to devote time to learning. Give them the chance to spend longer than expected for a task so that they can pore through books and search across the net to learn the best way to do things. Give them O'Reilly books. Encourage them to spend time reading them. Encourage them to make connections online and become familiar with sites such as this one where they can learn the habit of trying to program well instead of trying to program just to get done.

Yes, that's a perk. For them as well as for you. :)

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vote up 6 vote down

Good hardware (for voting)

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vote up 30 vote down

Private offices (for voting)

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You can communicate even if you're in different rooms. – Sasha Jan 29 at 5:19
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@slim: Disagree. You can collaborate via umpteen desktop sharing and conferencing tools. Add video if you really want to. Devs only benefit from proximity when working on the same work unit; and are often tasked to things too small for two people, so they become a distraction. – tsilb Apr 27 at 22:12
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vote up 30 vote down

Casual dress (for voting)

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vote up 30 vote down

Work from home. (for voting)

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vote up 443 vote down

In my experience, good programmers want to program with as few distractions as possible. Some of these are more relevant to big companies, and I'm not sure where you work, but here are some examples:

  • Casual dress code: Young programmers in particular will have a tough time avoiding resentment of a strict dress code. "I'm just going to sit at my desk all day--why do I need to wear slacks/polos/other uncomfortable business clothes?" In my opinion, this is half rebellion and half honest productivity-seeking: It really is much easier to program in jeans and a t-shirt than slacks and a formal button-down. The question you probably need to ask yourself is if the potential productivity gain and morale boost is worth the potential loss of "professional" atmosphere. It all depends on your situation... there are startups and Fortune 500 companies out there which allow jeans & t-shirts.
  • Few meetings: Almost nothing is more distracting than a constant stream of meetings. Try to avoid team-wide "status meetings" that could be carried out via individual e-mails or conversations. Programmers like it when their employer lets them program.
  • Experienced coworkers: Good programmers want to improve. If any of your other employees have contributed to big open source projects, or have worked individually on some particularly successful internal projects, let your prospectives know!
  • Private offices: This is rarely practical anywhere but venture-capitalized startups, but if you can offer candidates their own offices, they'll leave the interview with hearts in their eyes. Programming is so much easier when you aren't distracted by foot traffic and people singing happy-birthday one cube over.
  • Cool stuff: If you can afford it, subsidize games for lunch breaks and post-work hang out sessions.
  • Best practices: This will ensnare good programmers and intimidate less experienced ones: Show that your candidates will be working with reliable, sane version control, and that there are coding standards about unit tests or inheritance or anything. Organization is important.
  • Don't nickel-and-dime: If you can be flexible with hours, do it! No one likes having to clock out every time they go to the restroom; it feels like you're not being valued as an employee.
  • Dual monitors: Instant win for almost any programmer who's worked with dual monitors before.
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I'd say mentoring would be right up there, though that goes with the experienced programmers bit. – Daemin Sep 19 '08 at 14:15
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A good PC, ideally with fast hard disks. No point having them watching a spinning cursor and letting their attention wander. For a small cost you'll be keeping them working without them even knowing you did it! Besides, most of us like shiny new toys! – Ray Hayes Sep 19 '08 at 19:05
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A good PC makes a big difference. Nobody likes to work with only 1GB of RAM... :( – apandit Sep 19 '08 at 20:39
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+1 for dual monitors – alex Dec 22 '08 at 4:58
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+1 for casual dress code – Tanmoy Jan 29 at 4:18
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vote up 6 vote down

There are a number of things that come to mind, and not even for junior people.

  • Training packages for use with conferences, certifications, or something similar. Showing a dedication to future growth in the field
  • Provide flexiable starting times especially to those just getting out of college and not used to working a "day job"
  • if In an environment where they must work from home, help them out a bit there, subsidize internet service, and/or company cell phone. If you must have access to them, giving them a way to do it helps.
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vote up 27 vote down

I'm currently slightly experienced but I still call myself junior. Here is what I appreciate of my employer:

  • Buys me books. I have a diverse taste from C# to perl to C to Asm to database design to tsql etc. Book prices vary from $20 to $50. This usually requires a PO and approval and such.
  • Allows me to critique current projects. I've re-written a few project to be MUCH cleaner through the experience I gain. Each time I document why I made those changes. Every now and then I re-write my re-writes. It's amazing to see how much you change. I do this one on my own. I initiated it.
  • A fast computer and a 24" monitor. This actually helps a lot, but for any developer. Less frustration and more code on the screen. Monitor also rotates for those kinds of days.
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I have to admit, even though I have 3 x 19" monitors on my desk which I love, my last client gave me 2 x 30" monitors. I do miss being able to have my solution explorer, properties window and toolbox windows open and still be able to read my code without having to scroll right... – BenAlabaster Apr 2 at 0:21
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Totally agree. Editing code on a vertically tilted monitor is addictive, even though weird at first. – Andrei Taranchenko Apr 12 at 3:41
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vote up 1 vote down

The Joel Test has some good ideas, although you might not consider them "perks".

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vote up 18 vote down

Lets them, on company time, do some private projects (things that could be useful for the company, but things they get to pick)

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vote up 44 vote down

Being able to work remotely + flexible hours, Tech books give-a-way, and lots of love!

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Ditto on working remotely, but you need to make sure they are "in it".. Prob after a 6-12 month probation period perhaps? I REALLY wish I could work from home, I actually get a lot more done. – Rob Cooper Sep 18 '08 at 20:43
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vote up 39 vote down

give them responsibilities and some degree of freedom.

make them feel like they are developing something for themselves, with passion

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vote up 1 vote down

One nice perq we have here (beyond training, great environment, and the rest) is subsidized gym membership.

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vote up 13 vote down

Treat them as peers

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