IT DRILLDOWN
 
NEWSLETTERS
 

CIO.com updates, insights and advice on technology, management and your career.

 
 
 
LEADERSHIP
 
CIO Executive Programs
The Leader in Face-to-Face Education for Senior Executives

Offering regional and national programs, CIO (and CSO) events bring together some of the most respected names and thought leaders in information technology and security. Presented by CIOs and other senior level executives, these invitation-only programs offer timely topics and strong networking. Learn More »

 
CIO Executive Council
A Peer-Advisory Service and Professional Association for CIOs

Portfolio Management Maturity Model at Chevron - Presentation & Discussion

November 13, 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM ET (GMT-4)

The fundamental goal of the model is to help IT become a business partner and earn a seat at the table. Core to the model is to establish a five year IT strategic road map that is owned by the business. Presenter Janinne Franke is manager of strategy, planning & optimization at Chevron's corporate department & services. She will share processes and lessons learned from developing and implementing the model.

More / Register »

Learn more about the CIO Executive Council »



 
 
RESOURCE CENTER
 
 
 
SUBSCRIBE TO CIO
 
Are you involved in setting the direction for your company's IT budget or strategy?

Apply today for a FREE subscription to CIO Magazine!

 
 
 

Managing and Motivating Developers: Tips for Management Cluefulness

Encouraging productivity from your programming staff--at least in the developers' estimation--requires a few special techniques.

 

June 24, 2008CIO — In many ways, managing a developer is just like managing any other employee. Developers want managers who'll help them solve business and technical problems, who'll protect them from unnecessary office politics and who will help them meet their personal career goals. But programmers are...different. Like musicians, these creative folks can alternate between big-picture thinking and persnickety detail in a heartbeat. They can be sidetracked by silly toys, and convinced to work overtime by the promise of pizza and a T-shirt. Trying to understand and motivate these people can drive managers—particularly nontechnical managers—to distraction.

This is not, of course, a new challenge. Managers have been trying to inspire programmers since mainframe days, and several classic books still have relevance today. For example, Tom DeMarco's Peopleware was probably the first to recommend that developers be given telephones with ringers that could be turned off to minimize distractions from the warm, creative fog in which a creative person innovates.

Stan Rifkin, an advisory services provider with Master Systems, referred to a Harvard Business Review essay called "Who are your motivated workers?" by M. Scott Myers, written in 1964 (vol. 42, issue 1, pp. 73-88, if you want to look it up). "'How to motivate engineers' is an old, well-known subject; note the date of the article cited," says Rifkin. The article, in turn, relies on Herzberg's pioneering work, published in HBR a year or two earlier. He added, "So many of our questions have been answered by research and evidence. We just have to learn how to find those answers."

Based on plenty of conversations with developers, however, most managers still haven't learned the proper skills.

So, in the expectation that developers know how their managers can motivate them and can manage them most effectively, I asked in several online communities and social networks, "What one thing, one thing, should the CIO understand about managing and motivating developers?" Developers did give me quite a bit of input, though not at the volume I saw from earlier articles in the Getting Clueful series (which highlighted IT workers' opinions of the key things bosses should understand about telecommuting, software requirements, Agile development, fighting spam and computer consulting). I've summarized the responses below; as you'll see, the introspective nature of the question gave some surprising answers.

Trust Developers to Do Their Jobs

Some managers act as though developers, left to themselves, would never write a line of code, and instead would spend all day playing computer games. That just isn't true. The primary wish among developers who responded to my question was that managers recognize their own and their team's abilities, and trust them to get the work done. ("Try and challenge me. I'm so much more than what you use me for," wrote one anonymous developer via Twitter.)

"All motivation comes from within," says SQL consultant Rudy Limeback, who was a developer for 30 years. "Developers need to be allowed to develop because that's what they love to do," he says.

Managers can appeal to the pride a developer feels in his work. "Find out what the developers like to do, and find a way to let them do it so that it benefits the company," suggests Ilja Preuß software developer at disy Informationssysteme GmbH. "The most motivated people are those who do what they like doing."

"I want my IT manager to understand that I care about the quality of my work," says Bruce Lindman, senior database consultant for Quick Solutions in Columbus, Ohio. "I comment my code with my name, and thus 'sign' every script or procedure I write. Nothing frustrates me more than having to do a shoddy job or compromise quality."

You can't appeal to developers' creativity unless you give them the time and space to think and create. "Techies need time to think as well as doing the code," says Lotus Notes guru Ben Poole.

"Developers, as a general group, are highly competent individuals," wrote Paul Danielson, IT director for a newspaper publishing company. "They need to be given room to develop solutions on their own (although perhaps subject to peer reviews to some extent) without being hand-fed work and methodology by management—especially at the CIO level. Nothing quashes the spirit of a good developer quicker than being given a task and then told how he/she must accomplish it."

Nor should managers expect software to be cranked out by factory methods. Software development is not a Six Sigma activity. "You're discovering, not producing widgets," wrote James, a senior developer.

Instead, give developers the big picture. "The more work I am assigned in advance, the better," wrote one via Twitter. "I can see the endgame on my own instead of having it fed to me by someone else."

Loading...
 
 
ABCs
 

Just the basics, please. Sometimes we all need a refresher or we need to make sure our team and our colleagues are all on the same page.

Over 25 tutorials on everything from business intelligence to virtualization.

 
 
FEATURED SPONSORS
 
 
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

Best Practices in Choosing and Consuming Managed Security Services

A Guide to Messaging Archiving

2008 Google Communications Intelligence Report

The Impact of Messaging and Web Threats

Comparing Google and Other Leading Messaging Security Solutions

Universal Search in Healthcare Organizations

Google Case Study: Agile Software

Universal Search in High Tech Organizations

Enabling Enterprise 2.0

Renowned Engineering Institution Chooses AMD Processor-Based Servers

Extending the Enterprise Network Through Mobility

Keep proven data center technology. Evolve with Brocade

Motorola AirDefense can identify and exterminate your rogue APs. Learn more

CA's IT Security centralizes your identity management to turn security into a proactive, business-building tool

Efficient - Flexible - Compliant

Is there a secret to Sharepoint® Security? www.SharePointSecured.com

Request a Novell/Microsoft deployment workshop

Keep your valued customers through tight business integration - it's a lot easier than you think

Simplified business collaboration, we make the connections so you don't have to

Compuware.com - See how we make IT rock around the world

Discover PMI's credentials and career path tools

SOA Educational Library at the TIBCO SOA Resource Center

Grassroots Data Governance with SAP MDM

E-LOAN Maintains Reputation as a Privacy Leader with Symantec

Information Security: Data Drains and How to Prevent Loss

A Guide to Understanding Hosted and Managed Messaging

Google Apps Premier Edition Helps Indoff Manage E-mail More Effectively

CapGemini Cut Call Center Costs with Google Apps Premier Edition

Comprehensive Review of Security and Vulnerability Protections for Google Apps

Deploying a Google Search Appliance is Not your Typical IT Implementation

Google Case Study: Pioneer Investments

The Case for Universal Search

Universal Search in Financial Services Organizations

Efficient by design: Watch this flash demo of the Quad-Core AMD Opteron Processor

HP and Oracle deploy unbreakable computing infrastructure at Replacements, Ltd.

Rolling the dice with your security? Take the Self-Assessment Test now

Industry Analyst Report: Top Hosted Exchange Vendors in 2008

Log onto Hitachi True Stories, films inspired by the next great achievement

CA delivers deeper insight into your assets, resources, projects & services so you can make more informed IT decisions

Manage your IT more effectively

Request a Novell/Microsoft deployment workshop and kit

Request a Novell/Microsoft deployment kit

Let Hubspan's managed service tackle your business integration challenge so you can focus on your core business

Strong Authentication. Secure USB data storage. One Device

Build up or Tear down? See how UC makes sense with Nortel. Calculate your UC ROI

Dell Latitude: Battery life up to 19 hours. Learn more

TDWI Report shows strong validation for investing in predictive analytics

Improve delivery of product information to customers.

7 Requirements of Data Loss Prevention

Data Loss Prevention: Keeping Sensitive Data Out of the Wrong Hands