I had a job with a great manager. Because of a large project he was actively involved with coding to help pick up the slack. The manager left and was not replaced for quite some time. We had an over-seer from the accounting department (Not know knowing how to code was the least of his problems). We were to be more independent and self-managed.
Now I know what a good manager should be doing for their programmers instead of writing code:
- Sit in those boring meetings where other managers discuss the label on a text box for half an hour.
- Beg someone in accounting to pay for me to take the same training class that every other programmer in our department has taken.
- Discover that one of the most important objectives to the operations manager is to have all development to occur in one application after our team spent the last two years developing custom websites without engaging in a shouting match during a weekly staff meeting. How I wished for a simple memo: All future development will occur here _.
- Deal with a fellow staff member who spends the entire time during our weekly review lamenting about how much is on his plate, but doesn't mention that he has not actually accomplished anything in the past week.
- Organize and prioritize the requests from all the different department managers.
- Frequently review code for standards instead of waiting 6 months to discover to his astonishment how bad one of the developer's code really is.
- Provide a place for programmers to work. You don't have to know what that is; just ask.
- Treating people the same is not the same as being fair. The dress code that is appropriate for employees who work in front of customers is not the same for a programmer. Wearing a tie will not improve code. It just gives staff one more reason to return a head-hunter's call.
- Be available when your staff needs you. You can't code at the same time.
- Take the time to have a well-thought arguement to senior management why someone else should get paid to write documentation.
When requests for development are made, make sure the other party is willing and able to do the testing to approve the software in a timely fashion. Or better yet, make sure they make requests for applications they actually plan on using. 12. Know about the software you have to support and make sure your staff is prepared. We just paid $150,000 to upgrade our ERP software which now requires SQL Server 2112; hope the DB Admin can figure it out. 13. Know when your people are blowing smoke on how long a project will take. And don't base it on how long you think you can do it; base it on knowing how fast they can code by sitting down next to them and watch them work. Knowledge of the project itself is necessary as well.
