▲ | juleska 4 days ago | |
I've worked in technology for 20 years, and at least 15 of those have been inside large enterprises. In my experience, technological innovation is almost nonexistent in these environments. Most people in enterprise IT are not deeply connected to technology itself — many come from unrelated areas, grew into roles without genuine interest in the craft, or were absorbed into the system through inertia. The result is a cycle of delays, low standards of software development, and a near-total disregard for quality and maintainability. On top of that, the consultancy model dominates: endless "transformative" projects, pitched with buzzwords, costing upwards of $300,000 per month for an "agile squad" — usually 5–6 junior or mid-level developers rebranded as "senior." Value delivery is irrelevant because another part of the enterprise machine is dedicated to "protecting" budgets, ensuring they don't shrink year over year, and inflating headcount so managers can parade the size of their teams. This creates the elephant-in-the-room effect: organizations that are slow, rigid, and performative rather than adaptive. In more than one company I've worked at, it was rare to find someone on a technology team who could even write a simple SQL query. But they were experts in "agility," microservices, and "scalability" — all while serving theie super systems/projetcs with a super number of 8 daily users and a mess of integrations with SAP, Salesforce, or whatever the enterprise flavor of the month happened to be. With that I can say, it's frustrating, it's messy,full of political interactions, but it pays the bills, but it's still shit, maybe you decorate it a little here or there, but in the end it's just decorated shit. |