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While I haven't spent anytime as a developer in the private sector, I do have a couple years experience working as a developer in a university payroll office, where a similar mentality prevails. This wasn't even the job I was hired to do, but by actively making more own job more efficient through custom development I was able to present a compelling case for extending that model ("let the computer do the work for you") to other areas of the office. As of just a couple days ago, development now is my full-time job. I still don't get all the tools I would like to have or drive process in the way I would like to (and we certainly aren't selling software), but my point is that sometimes the best way to persuade management of a project's efficacy is to simply start small and let them see the benefits first-hand. I essentially automated a full-time job into a 0.25 FTE job. If you already have projects on your plate then it may require more creativity on your part, but I think the same sort of results-oriented mindset can be useful. Today when my office begins new project, its common-place for management to turn to me and say, "How can develop development help solve this problem?" That sort of attitude gives me a lot of room to say, "Sure, but let's approach this in the correct way."

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While I haven't spent anytime as a developer in the private sector, I do have a couple years experience working as a developer in a university payroll office, where a similar mentality prevails. This wasn't even the job I was hired to do, but by actively making more own job more efficient through custom development I was able to present a compelling case for extending that model ("let the computer do the work for you") to other areas of the office. As of just a couple days ago, development now is my full-time job. I still don't get all the tools I would like to have or drive process in the way I would like to (and we certainly aren't selling software), but my point is that sometimes the best way to persuade management of a project's efficacy is to simply start small and let them see the benefits first-hand. I essentially automated a full-time job into a 0.25 FTE job. If you already have projects on your plate then it may require more creativity on your part, but I think the same sort of results-oriented mindset can be useful. Today when my office begins new project, its common-place for management to turn to me and say, "How can develop help solve this problem?" That sort of attitude gives me a lot of room to say, "Sure, but let's approach this in the correct way."