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"What engineers are not getting at their current jobs": an interview with Lynne Tye

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How do you find a job with work/life balance? Most companies won’t tell you “we want you to work long hours” on their careers page, it’s hard to ask, and it’s not like you can go to a job board and search for work/life balance. Until now, that is.

Key Values is a newly launched site that lets you filter jobs by values. Instead of the standard boring “at X we’re passionate about doing Y with technology stack Z” (more on that below), you can search by the things that make a job work or not work for you. That might mean work/life balance, but you can also search for companies that are good for junior devs, or have a flat organization. Different people have different values, and Key Values reflects that.

It’s still early days, so there aren’t a huge number of jobs yet, but I love the concept and wanted to hear more. So I got in touch with Lynne Tye, the creator of Key Values, to hear how she ended up creating such a different, and useful, approach to hiring.

Q. Could you share your background with our readers, how you became a programmer?

LYNNE: I studied brain and cognitive sciences at MIT, then went into a PhD program in neuroscience at UCSF. Two years in, I realized it wasn’t for me, and I dropped out. Then I had a couple of odd jobs while I was soul searching, and a few months later I started working at Homejoy, as an operations manager for the Bay Area, a people manager.

While I was working at Homejoy, I noticed how powerful the engineers were. They could make so much impact with just one line of code, and I always felt frustrated when I needed them to fix a small bug that was making my life a nightmare. What I was doing just wasn’t as scalable, like having lots of 1-on-1 meetings. So after Homejoy, I decided I wanted to learn how to code.

Q. What did you learn from your experience before starting Key Values?

LYNNE: Scientific academia is one of the few industries where there’s a master/apprentice relationship, a very clear structure of mentorship. I think that the way you view relationships, the way you make decisions about joining labs is based on the idea of working relationships that need to be as compatible and symbiotic as possible. A lot of times these mentors stay with you your whole life [like family], your mentor’s mentor is your “grandfather”. I noticed this was lacking when I started doing web development.

After grad school, I was feeling pretty lost and really wasn’t sure what I wanted to do with my life. I had basically been laser focused on becoming an academic professor and research scientist for the last 6 years and hadn’t once looked up to consider a different career. One of the main frustrations I had with research was how slow it was, and slow it was to get feedback.

The environment at Homejoy gave me all of that. It was intense, exciting, fast-paced, and there was constantly feedback from all directions. At the time, it was my dream job. And I think it just also made me realize that it wasn’t for everyone, but it was perfect for me. It made me realize that everyone has their own set of personal values/goals and it’s so important to find work that aligns with those.

Q. Doesn’t sound like there was much work/life balance at Homejoy.

LYNNE: Hahaha, there definitely wasn’t. But, I didn’t want work/life balance! When I left grad school, I genuinely thought work/life balance was a proxy for laziness, or a lack of passion. Of course, after grinding it out at Homejoy for a year and a half, I burned out quite a bit. Afterwards, I wanted work/life balance for the first time. And I found it in the lifestyle I had as a web freelancer.

Ironically, after a couple of years of having so much work/life balance, I started to miss the excitement and sense of urgency of working a lot. That’s where I am now: I’d feel a little sad if I was on a team and the only one working past 6pm or 7pm.

All of this sharpened my views on finding a new career: you need to know what you want, and you should be picky and demanding when you’re evaluating your options.

Q. As an operations manager at Homejoy you did some of the hiring. What did you look for?

LYNNE: It’s funny to look back at it. I didn’t have the language at the time, I didn’t have the framework or language to say what we were. And hiring was so new to me, I didn’t have any experience with it, I hadn’t really articulated the actual values we had.

It was very [intense], we were not shy about it. Everyone worked really late, really early, and on weekends.it felt really exciting, and I don’t think anyone felt like it was work. We all enjoyed spending lots of time together and had all decided we were willing to make that commitment. At the time, I think I was always looking to hire people similar to the existing team.

Q. It seems many companies can’t articulate what they want?

LYNNE: They can’t. Many employers and job seekers have not taken the time to evaluate who they are, where they’re trying to go in terms of culture, and how that impacts hiring. I view my job as helping teams articulate values. And not only helping them articulate them and write them, but also to challenge them, asking whether they’re translating them into actions, or whether they’re things they just write on their website or on their walls.

Q. One my pet peeves in hiring is the focus on particular technologies. Why do you think hiring managers focus on this so much?

LYNNE: In general I think that job descriptions and the way that people are approaching recruiting and sourcing is outdated, given how much information we all have access to now. Previously it was harder to get information about different employment opportunities, so the biggest differentiators were salary, and do you have experience with hard skills we need today. As time has gone by these things are still important, but people have the ability to compare more teams and have more information to compare them by, and job descriptions haven’t reflected this change.

Software development has changed over the years. I can’t speak from experience, but it’s easier to build things today than it was 20 years. The ability to learn technologies, it wasn’t the same conversation it was 20 years ago. I don’t think it makes sense anymore to talk about experience with a particular technology.

Some companies are happy to have people learn on the job, but people just follow the [job posting] template everyone uses:

  • Generic part about what the company does.
  • Generic part about how much you’ll learn, how much fun it is, how much impact you’ll make.
  • Bullet point with requirements, experience with X, Y, Z technology.
  • And then another set of bullet points about benefits and perks, and not-so-compelling reasons to join the company.

Q. Which brings us to Key Values, where you’re trying to do things differently. What exactly does Key Values do?

LYNNE: I try to help job seekers find teams that share their values.

Q. How did you come up with these values?

LYNNE: I interviewed dozens and dozens of engineers. I noticed it’s challenging for people to articulate or identify what they care about most. And I noticed that as people were telling me what they were looking for, it came with a story about a previous experience they had where their job didn’t have that value, and that brought to light why that was so important them.

After interviewing lots of engineers, I spent time thinking about values, and phrasing them in ways where they would apply to many teams, but not every team. For example, had I had “Mission driven” every single team would have selected it, and it wouldn’t help people differentiate between different teams. And I didn’t want to include values that were specific to one, or even zero teams. It was about striking the balance between those two extremes.

Q. How do you figure out what values the companies have?

LYNNE: Initially, I thought it would be more like research, I wanted to interview every engineer on the team, provide statistics. But I realized it’s not scalable, and I didn’t want to force teams to share information they weren’t comfortable sharing. You’ll never find a team that says “we never eat lunch together, we’re not friends, we’re really not social here” or “we have terrible code quality here.”

By limiting how many values [a team can choose] it tells you what they prioritize. Being limited and being forced to rank [the values they choose] is very informative, it discloses a lot of information implicitly.

Q. On your website you have job listings with these values, and you share with them with world. What can tell you from your data about what engineers care about?

LYNNE: The two things visitors pick most are work/life balance and high quality code base. This is both surprising and not surprising at all. [Next is] “remote ok”, although that is is a property, not a value, and I think that makes sense since I still don’t have that many team profiles on Key Values yet. I also think developers are more and more interested in remote opportunities. Close to that are “flexible work arrangements”, “team is diverse”.

To me, these are an indication of what engineers are not getting at their current jobs.

Q. Why is Key Values the only job board that lets you search based on work/life balance?

LYNNE: I don’t think previously there was a way for teams to truthfully tell whether the team really cared. By having a limited list [of values], and priorities, it lets you see who doesn’t prioritize it, otherwise I think most companies wouldn’t volunteer that information. How would you ask? If you poll companies, I can’t imagine any of them wanting to publicly state that they don’t.

At the end of the day, how you define work/life balance has implications, it’s difficult to categorize these things. Anyone who is reading about it, or talking about, it’s pretty divisive and polarizing. Some people think if you work more than 40 hours a week you don’t have work/life balance, but I would disagree. My goal is to give companies a chance to tell us how they interpret work/life balance, and expose people to different definitions of that term.

Q. What does a sane workweek mean to you?

LYNNE: A sane workweek to me wouldn’t be a good description, I’d say i’m looking for a sane work month. I love working, I consider myself pretty industrious, but the flexibility to decide when I work is more important. Sometimes I want to work a ridiculous amount one week, and then take a few days off, maybe have a long weekend. And that’s just in terms of when I’m working, and how much.

In general I don’t believe in 40 hours a week, because I don’t operate that way. I don’t have as regular of a schedule, and would 100% rather work 60 hours a week if I could decide when and where I can work, as opposed to a 9-5 at the same physical place with no flexibility. I’d feel much more suffocated with the latter.

In terms of a relationship with an employer, I think the most important thing to me is working someplace where they genuinely support and show interest in other aspects of my life. And that they share some of their priorities in life with me. [The means] having a network of people around you who understand who you are as a whole and support all of you, For me, it means a lot to not just talk about work at work, but to really interact with one another as friends too. I know for sure that this isn’t true for everyone, but I prefer to blur the boundary between professional and personal. I don’t like having complete work/life separation.

OK, back to Itamar here: that was my interview, and now I’d like to ask for your help. Key Values is as far as I know the only place where you can search for jobs with work/life balance, or other values you may care about. That’s hugely valuable, and so I want to see Lynne’s project succeed. If you agree, here’s what you can do:

  • Is your company hiring? Get in touch with Lynne and get your company listed.
  • Are you looking for a job, or plan to look for one in the future? Go visit Key Values and sign up for the newsletter: the more people use the site, the easier it’ll be for Lynne to get more companies on board.
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don42
2545 days ago
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The lone and level sands of software

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There’s that moment late at night when you can’t sleep, and you’re so tired you can’t even muster the energy to check the time. So you stare blindly at the ceiling and look back over your life, and you think: “Did I really accomplish anything? Was my work worth anything at all?”

I live in a 140-year-old house, a house which has outlasted its architect and builders, and quite possibly will outlast me. But having spent the last twenty years of my life building software, I can’t really hope to have my own work live on. In those late night moments I sometimes believe that my resume, like that of most programmers, should open with a quote from Shelley’s mocking poem:

My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

Who among us has not had projects canceled, rewritten from scratch, obsoleted, abandoned or discarded? Was that code worth writing, or was all that effort just a futile waste?

Decay, boundless and bare

Consider some of the projects I’ve worked on. I’ve been writing software for 20+ years at this point, which means I’ve accumulated many decayed wrecks:

  • The multimedia CD-ROMs I created long ago no longer run on modern operating systems, not so much because of Microsoft but because of my own design mistake.
  • The dot-com I worked for turned out to be a dot-bomb.
  • An offline educational platform turned out, on reflection by the customer, not to require offline capabilities. It was rewritten (by someone else) as a simpler web app.
  • The airline reservation project I was small part of, a massive and rarely undertaken project, finally went live on a small airline. Google, which had acquired the company that built it, shut the project down a couple of years later. Some parts were used elsewhere and lived on, but I’m told that they have since been rewritten; by now the legacy software has probably been decommissioned.
  • Projects done for startups… gone down with the company, or abandoned by a pivot, or surviving in zombie form as unmaintained open source.

I could go on, but that would just make me sadder. This is not to say none of my software lives on: there are open source projects, mostly, that have survived quite a whole, and will hopefully continue for many more. But I’ve spent years of my life working on software that is dead and gone.

How about you? How much of your work has survived?

Which yet survive

So what do you have left, after all these years of effort? You get paid for your work, of course, and getting paid has its benefits. And if you’re lucky your software proved valuable to someone, for a while at least, before it was replaced or shut down. For me at least that’s worth even more than the money.

But there’s something else you gain, something you get to take with you when the money is spent and your users have moved on: knowledge, skills, and mistakes you’ll know how to avoid next time. Every failure I’ve listed above, every mistake I’ve made, every preventable rewrite, is something I hope to avoid the next time around.

And while software mostly dies quickly, the ideas live on, and if we pay attention it’ll be the good ideas that survive. I’ve borrowed ideas for my own logging library from software that is now dead. If my library dies one day, and no doubt it will, I can only hope its own contributions will be revived by one of my users, or even someone who just half-remembers a better way of doing things.

Dead but not forgotten

Since the ultimate benefit of most software projects is what you learned from them, it’s important to make sure you’re actually learning. It’s easy to just do your work and move on. If you’re not careful you’ll forget to look for the mistakes to avoid next time, and you won’t notice the ideas that are the only thing that can truly survive in the long run.

  • Every month or two, take a look at what you’ve been working on, and ask yourself: “Am I learning something new?” If you aren’t, it’s time for a change: perhaps just a bit of introspection to see what there is to be learned, perhaps a new project, maybe even a new job.
  • If you have learned something, ask yourself if you’ve ensured that this knowledge is passed on to others, so they can gain something from it.

As for me, I’ve been writing a weekly newsletter where I share my mistakes, some mentioned above, others in my current work: you can gain from my failures, without all the wasted effort.

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don42
2598 days ago
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The sudden death and eternal life of Solaris

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As had been rumored for a while, Oracle effectively killed Solaris on Friday. When I first saw this, I had assumed that this was merely a deep cut, but in talking to Solaris engineers still at Oracle, it is clearly much more than that. It is a cut so deep as to be fatal: the core Solaris engineering organization lost on the order of 90% of its people, including essentially all management.

Of note, among the engineers I have spoken with, I heard two things repeatedly: “this is the end” and (from those who managed to survive Friday) “I wish I had been laid off.” Gone is any of the optimism (however tepid) that I have heard over the years — and embarrassed apologies for Oracle’s behavior have been replaced with dismay about the clumsiness, ineptitude and callousness with which this final cut was handled. In particular, that employees who had given their careers to the company were told of their termination via a pre-recorded call — “robo-RIF’d” in the words of one employee — is both despicable and cowardly. To their credit, the engineers affected saw themselves as Sun to the end: they stayed to solve hard, interesting problems and out of allegiance to one another — not out of any loyalty to the broader Oracle. Oracle didn’t deserve them and now it doesn’t have them — they have been liberated, if in a depraved act of corporate violence.

Assuming that this is indeed the end of Solaris (and it certainly looks that way), it offers a time for reflection. Certainly, the demise of Solaris is at one level not surprising, but on the other hand, its very suddenness highlights the degree to which proprietary software can suffer by the vicissitudes of corporate capriciousness. Vulnerable to executive whims, shareholder demands, and a fickle public, organizations can simply change direction by fiat. And because — in the words of the late, great Roger Faulkner — “it is easier to destroy than to create,” these changes in direction can have lasting effect when they mean stopping (or even suspending!) work on a project. Indeed, any engineer in any domain with sufficient longevity will have one (or many!) stories of exciting projects being cancelled by foolhardy and myopic management. For software, though, these cancellations can be particularly gutting because (in the proprietary world, anyway) so many of the details of software are carefully hidden from the users of the product — and much of the innovation of a cancelled software project will likely die with the project, living only in the oral tradition of the engineers who knew it. Worse, in the long run — to paraphrase Keynes — proprietary software projects are all dead. However ubiquitous at their height, this lonely fate awaits all proprietary software.

There is, of course, another way — and befitting its idiosyncratic life and death, Solaris shows us this path too: software can be open source. In stark contrast to proprietary software, open source does not — cannot, even — die. Yes, it can be disused or rusty or fusty, but as long as anyone is interested in it at all, it lives and breathes. Even should the interest wane to nothing, open source software survives still: its life as machine may be suspended, but it becomes as literature, waiting to be discovered by a future generation. That is, while proprietary software can die in an instant, open source software perpetually endures by its nature — and thrives by the strength of its communities. Just as the existence of proprietary software can be surprisingly brittle, open source communities can be crazily robust: they can survive neglect, derision, dissent — even sabotage.

In this regard, I speak from experience: from when Solaris was open sourced in 2005, the OpenSolaris community survived all of these things. By the time Oracle bought Sun five years later in 2010, the community had decided that it needed true independence — illumos was born. And, it turns out, illumos was born at exactly the right moment: shortly after illumos was announced, Oracle — in what remains to me a singularly loathsome and cowardly act — silently re-proprietarized Solaris on August 13, 2010. We in illumos were indisputably on our own, and while many outsiders gave us no chance of survival, we ourselves had reason for confidence: after all, open source communities are robust because they are often united not only by circumstance, but by values, and in our case, we as a community never lost our belief in ZFS, Zones, DTrace and myriad other technologies like MDB, FMA and Crossbow.

Indeed, since 2010, illumos has thrived; illumos is not only the repository of record for technologies that have become cross-platform like OpenZFS, but we have also advanced our core technologies considerably, while still maintaining highest standards of quality. Learning some of the mistakes of OpenSolaris, we have a model that allows for downstream innovation, experimentation and differentiation. For example, Joyent’s SmartOS has always been focused on our need for a cloud hypervisor (causing us to develop big features like hardware virtualization and Linux binary compatibility), and it is now at the heart of a massive buildout for Samsung (who acquired Joyent a little over a year ago). For us at Joyent, the Solaris/illumos/SmartOS saga has been formative in that we have seen both the ill effects of proprietary software and the amazing resilience of open source software — and it very much informed our decision to open source our entire stack in 2014.

Judging merely by its tombstone, the life of Solaris can be viewed as tragic: born out of wedlock between Sun and AT&T and dying at the hands of a remorseless corporate sociopath a quarter century later. And even that may be overstating its longevity: Solaris may not have been truly born until it was made open source, and — certainly to me, anyway — it died the moment it was again made proprietary. But in that shorter life, Solaris achieved the singular: immortality for its revolutionary technologies. So while we can mourn the loss of the proprietary embodiment of Solaris (and we can certainly lament the coarse way in which its technologists were treated!), we can rejoice in the eternal life of its technologies — in illumos and beyond!

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don42
2633 days ago
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Less stress, more productivity: why working fewer hours is better for you and your employer

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Update: This post got to #1 on Hacker News and the /r/programming subreddit, and had over 40,000 views. Given that level of interest in the subject I've decided to write The Programmer's Guide to a Sane Workweek.

There's always too much work to be done on software projects, too many features to implement, too many bugs to fix. Some days you're just not going through the backlog fast enough, you're not producing enough code, and it's taking too long to fix a seemingly-impossible bug. And to make things worse you're wasting time in pointless meetings instead of getting work done.

Once it gets bad enough you can find yourself always scrambling, working overtime just to keep up. Pretty soon it's just expected, and you need to be available to answer emails at all hours even when there are no emergencies. You're tired and burnt out and there's still just as much work as before.

The real solution is not working even harder or even longer, but rather the complete opposite: working fewer hours.

Some caveats first:

  • The more experienced you are the better this will work. If this is your first year working after school you may need to just deal with it until you can find a better job, which you should do ASAP.
  • Working fewer hours is effectively a new deal you are negotiating with your employer. If you're living from paycheck to paycheck you have no negotiating leverage, so the first thing you need to do is make sure you have some savings in the bank.

Fewer hours, more productivity

Why does working longer hours not improve the situation? Because working longer makes you less productive at the same time that it encourages bad practices by your boss. Working fewer hours does the opposite.

1. A shorter work-week improves your ability to focus

As I've discussed before, working while tired is counter-productive. It takes longer and longer to solve problems, and you very quickly hit the point of diminishing returns. And working consistently for long hours is even worse for your mental focus, since you will quickly burn out.

Long hours: "It's 5 o'clock and I should be done with work, but I just need to finish this problem, just one more try," you tell yourself. But being tired it actually takes you another three hours to solve. The next day you go to work tired and unfocused.

Shorter hours: "It's 5 o'clock and I wish I had this fixed, but I guess I'll try tomorrow morning." The next morning, refreshed, you solve the problem in 10 minutes.

2. A shorter work-week promotes smarter solutions

Working longer hours encourages bad programming habits: you start thinking that the way to solve problems is just forcing yourself to get through the work. But programming is all about automation, about building abstractions to reduce work. Often you can get huge reductions in effort by figuring out a better way to implement an API, or that a particular piece of functionality is not actually necessary.

Let's imagine your boss hands you a task that must ship to your customer in 2 weeks. And you estimate that optimistically it will take you 3 weeks to implement.

Long hours: "This needs to ship in two weeks, but I think it's 120 hours to complete... so I guess I'm working evenings and weekends again." You end up even more burnt out, and probably the feature will still ship late.

Shorter hours: "I've got two weeks, but this is way too much work. What can I do to reduce the scope? Guess I'll spend a couple hours thinking about it."

And soon: "Oh, if I do this restructuring I can get 80% of the feature done in one week, and that'll probably keep the customer happy until I finish the rest. And even if I underestimated I've still got the second week to get that part done."

3. A shorter work-week discourages bad management practices

If your response to any issue is to work longer hours you are encouraging bad management practices. You are effectively telling your manager that your time is not valuable, and that they need not prioritize accordingly.

Long hours: If your manager isn't sure whether you should go to a meeting, they might tell themselves that "it might waste an hour of time, but they'll just work an extra hour in the evening to make it up." If your manager can't decide between two features, they'll just hand you both instead of making a hard decision.

Shorter hours: With shorter hours your time becomes more scarce and valuable. If your manager is at all reasonable less important meetings will get skipped and more important features will be prioritized.

Getting to fewer hours

A short work-week mean different things to different people. One programmer I know made clear when she started a job at a startup that she worked 40-45 hours a week and that's it. Everyone else worked much longer hours, but that was her personal limit. Personally I have negotiated a 35-hour work week.

Whatever the number that makes sense to you, the key is to clearly explain your limits and then stick to them. Tell you manager "I am going to be working a 40-hour work week, unless it's a real emergency." Once you've explained your limits you need to stick to them: no answering emails after hours, no agreeing to do just one little thing on the weekend.

And then you need to prove yourself by still being productive, and making sure that when you are working you are working. Spending a couple hours a day at work watching cat videos probably won't go well with shorter hours.

There are companies where this won't fly, of course, where management is so bad or norms are so out of whack that even a 40-hour work week by a productive team member won't be acceptable. In those cases you need to look for a new job, and as part of the interview figure out the work culture and project management practices of prospective employers. Do people work short hours or long hours? Is everything always on fire or do projects get delivered on time?

Whether you're negotiating your hours at your existing job or at a new job, you'll do better the more experienced and skilled of a programmer you are. If you want to learn how to get there check out The Programmer's Guide to a Sane Workweek.

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don42
2653 days ago
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Staying focused: it's not just your environment

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To be a productive programmer you need to stayed focused. Deep-diving into TV Tropes, chatting with your friends, or reading up on that fancy new web framework might be fun, often even educational, but they won’t get that feature you’re working on out the door.

And there are harder to spot distractions, digressions masquerading as necessary work: a fun bug that is less important than the one you’re working on, a technical detail that doesn’t really matter, a task that can be put off until later. In a world full of distractions, how can you stay focused?

One obvious influence on your ability to focus is your environment. Is it noisy or quiet, are you constantly interrupted or do you get time to yourself? But whatever environment is best for you, even working in your ideal environment may not suffice: you can still suffer from distraction and lack of focus.

If you want to stay focused you will need, beyond a good environment:

  1. The motivation to do your work, which requires you to understand both yourself and your task.
  2. Coping techniques to help you deal with the fact that focus is a finite resource.

Motivation: why are you doing this?

If you don’t care about your task, then you’ll have a hard time focusing. But once you do understand why you’re doing what you do, you’ll have an easier time staying on task, and you’ll have an easier time distinguishing between necessary subtasks and distracting digressions.

Why are you doing what you’re doing at work? In part, there are general motivations that apply to all your work on the job. For example:

  • Money: Getting paid so you can buy food and shelter.
  • Social pressure: You want your coworkers and boss to think well of you.

The problem with these motivations are that they are extrinsic: they come from the outside. Intrinsic motivations tend to work better. For example:

  • A sense of obligation: You want to help your customers or users.
  • Building and playing: Solving a hard problem is fun.
  • Curiosity: Learning is fun too.

These general motivations will not suffice, however, if you don’t understand why you’re doing a particular task. Why does this data need to be collected? Why do you need to debug this seemingly impossible edge case; does it really matter?

Applying motivation: will this further your goal?

So how do you use motivation to stayed focused?

  1. Figure out the motivations for your task.
  2. Strengthen your motivation.
  3. Judge each part of your work based on your motivations.

1. Discovering your motivations

Start with the big picture: why are you working this job? Probably for the money, hopefully because you believe in the organization’s goal, and perhaps for other reasons as well.

Then focus down on your particular task: why is it necessary? It may be that to answer this question you’ll need do more research, talking to the product owner who requested a feature, or the user who reported a bug. This research will, as an added bonus, also help you solve the problem more effectively.

Combine all of these and you will get a list of motivations that applies to your particular task. For example, let’s say you’re working on a bug in a flight search engine. Your motivations might be:

  1. Money: I work to make money.
  2. Organizational goal: I work here because I think helping people find cheap, convenient flights is worth doing.
  3. Task goal: This bug should be fixed because it prevents users from finding the most convenient flight on certain popular routes.
  4. Fun: This bug involves a challenging C++ problem I enjoy debugging.

2. Strengthening your motivations

Keeping your motivations in mind will help you avoid distractions, and the stronger your motivations the better you’ll do. If your motivations are weak then you can try different solutions:

  • If you work for a company whose goals don’t mean much to you, then you’ll have a harder time focusing: consider finding a new job where you’re doing something you care more about.
  • If after enough research you’ve decided your task is pointless, you can either try to push back (mark the bug as WONTFIX, go talk to the product manager), try to add an additional motivation (is this a good opportunity to learn something new?), or just live with the fact that it’ll take you longer to implement.

3. Judging your work

As you go about solving your task you can use your motivations to judge whether a new potential subtask is worth doing. That is, your motivations can help prevent digressions, seemingly useful tasks that shouldn’t actually be worked on.

Going back to the example above, imagine you encounter some interesting C++ language feature while working on it can be tempting to dive in. But judged by the four motivations it will only serve the fourth motivation, having fun, and likely won’t further your other goals. So if the bug is urgent then you should probably wait until it’s fixed to play around.

On the other hand, if you’re working on a pointless feature, your sole motivation might be “keep my manager happy so I can keep getting paid.” If you have two days to do the task, and it’ll only take two hours to implement it, spending some time getting “distracted” learning a technical skill might help with a different motivation: switching to a more interesting position or job.

Coping with lack of focus

Even if you have an ideal environment and plenty of motivation, you will eventually run out of focus. This happens in two different dimensions:

  1. Time: Many programming tasks will take days or weeks to complete, and won’t fit in the limited window you can stay focused at a time.
  2. Space: There’s only so much code you can keep in your head at once, and most software projects will quickly exceed your limits. That means you can only focus on part of the code at a time.

You can only work around these limitations using a variety of coping techniques:

  • Breaking up larger tasks into smaller tasks: Smaller tasks limit what you need to keep in your head, and can be finished more quickly.
  • Abstractions: Good abstraction boundaries reduce how much you need to keep in your head at a time, and allow you to finish your task more quickly.

Another coping technique I don’t see used quite as often is writing everything down.

Write everything down

You’re working on a hard bug: you’re not sure what’s going on or why the problem occurs, and when you do figure it out it’s going to take a few days to implement. Along the way you will be interrupted by scheduled meetings, coworkers asking questions, your bladder, email, going home for the evening, a weekend vacation, two quick bugs, and a few hundred other distractions. Write everything down and distractions and interruptions will matter far less.

You start by trying out different hypotheses: maybe the bug is in this function, perhaps it’s in the environment, maybe it’s a difference in library versions… Write down all your hypotheses. That way when you get interrupted you won’t forget about them.

You try one hypothesis, and it turns out to be wrong. Write that down so you don’t forget and test it again. Eventually you figure out the real problem: write that down too. That way when you come in the next day you’ll remember what you learned.

Discover another bug along the way? Write that down by filing a ticket, and move on. Have an idea for a feature? Write that down too.

Next you come up with a list of subtasks to actually implement the fix, and then write them down, marking them off as you implement them. You’ll be grateful to your past self when you come back from the weekend and try to remember where you were.

In short: write everything down.

How to stay focused

To stay focused you need to:

  • Work in the best environment you can manage: minimal distractions, appropriate levels of noise, and so on.
  • Understand your motivations, both in general and as applied to this task.
  • Try to strengthen your motivations, by choosing meaningful or interesting work.
  • Judge your work based on how it helps achieve your motivations.
  • Cope with lack of focus by breaking up tasks, using and building abstractions, and writing everything down.

PS: Want to learn more software engineering skills and techniques? I write a weekly email covering one of my mistakes and what you can learn from it.

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don42
2653 days ago
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Great explanation why I can't stay focused sometimes. #motivation
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