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Post Made Community Wiki by Community♦
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My dad always says "Responsibility without Authority is meaningless". However, I find that as developers, we get stuck in situations all the time where we are:
Of course there are tons of things you could say to get around this - find a new job, fight with boss, etc.... But what about a technical solution to this problem? That is, what kind of coding things can you do on your own without having to convince a team to correct some of these issues - or what kind of tools can you use to demonstrate why untracked bugs are hurting you, that deadlines are being missed because of quality problems, and how can you use these tools to gain more "authority" without having to be the boss? ***An example - the boss comes to you and says "Why are there so many bugs!!?!?" - most of us would say "We don't have a good system to track them!", but this is usually seen as an excuse in my experience. So what if you could point to some report (managers love reports) and say "See, this is why"?
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Responsibility without Authority is Meaningless - a technical-based solution?My dad always says "Responsibility without Authority is meaningless". However, I find that as developers, we get stuck in situations all the time where we are:
Of course there are tons of things you could say to get around this - find a new job, fight with boss, etc.... But what about a technical solution to this problem? That is, what kind of coding things can you do on your own without having to convince a team to correct some of these issues - or what kind of tools can you use to demonstrate why untracked bugs are hurting you, that deadlines are being missed because of quality problems, and how can you use these tools to gain more "authority" without having to be the boss?
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