show/hide this revision's text 2 edited body

The easiest way to keep your developers happy:

  1. Buy them gargetsgadgets
  2. List item
  3. List item
  4. Pay above market
  5. Feed them
  6. Flexi hours
  7. Let them do whatever they want even if it's not work related
  8. Never sack anyone

Unfortunately, as a manager you also need to get work done, on time, within budget and of acceptable quality. The low churn rate is only important since a good developer leaving company takes skills and knowledge with them. It affects your company in a number of ways: - Software quality drops. Some of the knowledge was never been externalised (formalised, transferred), valuable conceptual ideas literally went out of the door. As the result the integrity of design concepts suffers. High churn rate means that the software quality is never going to get anywhere above world average, which is frighteningly low.

  • Finding and training replacement costs money, takes time and effort. Hence has a negative impact on both budget and deadlines.

  • High employee turnover rate lowers morale and everyone's perception of the workplace, inducing even higher numbers of leavers. High churn rate is contagious.

So much for the foreword and putting things into the context. Practically I would give the following tips for keeping developers and happy and help get your managerial job done at the same time:

  • Be realistic about what can be accomplished. Never chronically overload your people. Clearly setting priorities is the best tool for workload management.

  • Never put unnecessary pressure on your reports. Give them slack when you able to, personal circumstances of your reports differ.

  • Be just. Have a set of principles, make them clear to everyone, and stick to them.

  • Sack chronic skivers, incompetent morons, dishonest folks, moaners. Always give them a chance first. If you let a team members to get away with murder others will follow the lead.

  • Fight routine. This is highly controversial. Most of the work is routine, routine means stability, routine means higher quality. Therefore fight only meaningless routine, anything that doesn't involve brain work, promote stability or good routine.

  • Empirical evidence suggests that having regular brain exercise helps keep developer brains sharp and happy. Regularly (i.e. weekly) set a well defined practical task for everyone to solve creatively. Reward good solutions.

  • Make effort to recognise and reward behaviours that lead to increased quality, lower cost and speed up work.

  • Put mechanisms in place that keeps the code base clean. You'd be surprised to learn how many developers are unhappy or even leave company since they do not wish any longer to "maintain this pile of shite". Many would readily jump at new project since they do not need to support the old screwed code base and can start from scratch. Put certain percentage of time and budget for re-factoring of existing code into every development plan. Allow for at least one prototype (even low fidelity); avoid adding up new problems to the code as much as possible.

  • Provide your support on all levels when your reports need it. The success of a project needs an issue to be escalated for resolution to customer, project sponsor, CEO? This is your job to take it up the ladder and make sure that a compromise is not made that is "not ok" with your specialists. Do not make fools out of them; make everyone respect your team competence.

  • Make sure your people are paid enough (check market), working conditions are adequate, they have good tools and access to the knowledge they need, that working practices aid that team does.

  • Make effort to listen to what developers say. Always listen and address when people complain about the company or their job. Remember complaint is “an expression of dissatisfaction whether oral or written, justified or not, from or on behalf of an eligible complainant, about the workplace ability to meet expectations”. As manager you won’t necessary hear what people really say, be approachable, make arrangements to become a part of the gossip-net if necessary (have a secretary, deputy who will seem more approachable than you are etc).

  • Do not expect anyone to be “self-motivated”. Remember that motivation has two ends (aligned with company needs and misaligned). It is your job to help foster the motivation that is right.

  • Take it easy, good development team won’t let you go astray.

show/hide this revision's text 1

The easiest way to keep your developers happy:

  1. Buy them gargets
  2. List item
  3. List item
  4. Pay above market
  5. Feed them
  6. Flexi hours
  7. Let them do whatever they want even if it's not work related
  8. Never sack anyone

Unfortunately, as a manager you also need to get work done, on time, within budget and of acceptable quality. The low churn rate is only important since a good developer leaving company takes skills and knowledge with them. It affects your company in a number of ways: - Software quality drops. Some of the knowledge was never been externalised (formalised, transferred), valuable conceptual ideas literally went out of the door. As the result the integrity of design concepts suffers. High churn rate means that the software quality is never going to get anywhere above world average, which is frighteningly low.

  • Finding and training replacement costs money, takes time and effort. Hence has a negative impact on both budget and deadlines.

  • High employee turnover rate lowers morale and everyone's perception of the workplace, inducing even higher numbers of leavers. High churn rate is contagious.

So much for the foreword and putting things into the context. Practically I would give the following tips for keeping developers and happy and help get your managerial job done at the same time:

  • Be realistic about what can be accomplished. Never chronically overload your people. Clearly setting priorities is the best tool for workload management.

  • Never put unnecessary pressure on your reports. Give them slack when you able to, personal circumstances of your reports differ.

  • Be just. Have a set of principles, make them clear to everyone, and stick to them.

  • Sack chronic skivers, incompetent morons, dishonest folks, moaners. Always give them a chance first. If you let a team members to get away with murder others will follow the lead.

  • Fight routine. This is highly controversial. Most of the work is routine, routine means stability, routine means higher quality. Therefore fight only meaningless routine, anything that doesn't involve brain work, promote stability or good routine.

  • Empirical evidence suggests that having regular brain exercise helps keep developer brains sharp and happy. Regularly (i.e. weekly) set a well defined practical task for everyone to solve creatively. Reward good solutions.

  • Make effort to recognise and reward behaviours that lead to increased quality, lower cost and speed up work.

  • Put mechanisms in place that keeps the code base clean. You'd be surprised to learn how many developers are unhappy or even leave company since they do not wish any longer to "maintain this pile of shite". Many would readily jump at new project since they do not need to support the old screwed code base and can start from scratch. Put certain percentage of time and budget for re-factoring of existing code into every development plan. Allow for at least one prototype (even low fidelity); avoid adding up new problems to the code as much as possible.

  • Provide your support on all levels when your reports need it. The success of a project needs an issue to be escalated for resolution to customer, project sponsor, CEO? This is your job to take it up the ladder and make sure that a compromise is not made that is "not ok" with your specialists. Do not make fools out of them; make everyone respect your team competence.

  • Make sure your people are paid enough (check market), working conditions are adequate, they have good tools and access to the knowledge they need, that working practices aid that team does.

  • Make effort to listen to what developers say. Always listen and address when people complain about the company or their job. Remember complaint is “an expression of dissatisfaction whether oral or written, justified or not, from or on behalf of an eligible complainant, about the workplace ability to meet expectations”. As manager you won’t necessary hear what people really say, be approachable, make arrangements to become a part of the gossip-net if necessary (have a secretary, deputy who will seem more approachable than you are etc).

  • Do not expect anyone to be “self-motivated”. Remember that motivation has two ends (aligned with company needs and misaligned). It is your job to help foster the motivation that is right.

  • Take it easy, good development team won’t let you go astray.