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avemg a day ago

> In reality, it's more like the Fellowship of the Rings trying to make it to Mt Doom, but that realization happens slowly.

And boy to the people making the decisions NOT want to hear that. You'll be dismissed as a naysayer being overly conservative. If you're in a position where your words have credibility in the org, then you'll constantly be asked "what can we do to make this NOT a quest to the top of Mt Doom?" when the answer is almost always "very little".

Wololooo a day ago | parent | next [-]

Impossible projects with impossible deadlines seems to be the norm and even when people pull them off miraculously the lesson learned is not "ok worked this time for some reason but we should not do this again", then the next people get in and go "it was done in the past why can't we do this?"

aakresearch 16 hours ago | parent [-]

Wow, sounds so familiar! I've once had to argue precisely against this very conclusion - "you saved us once in emergency, now you're bound to do it again".

Wrote to my management: "It is, by all means, great when a navigator is able to take over an incapacitated pilot and make an emergency landing, thus averting the fatality. But the conclusion shouldn't be that navigators expected to perform more landings or continue to be backup pilots. Neither it should be that we completely retrain navigators as pilots and vice versa. But if navigators are assigned some extra responsibility, it should be formally acknowledged by giving them appropriate training, tools and recognition. Otherwise many written-off airplanes and hospitalized personnel would ensue."

For all I know the only thing this writing might have contributed to was increased resentment by management.

RaftPeople a day ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> And boy to the people making the decisions NOT want to hear that.

You are 100% correct. The way I've tried to manage that is to provide info while not appearing to be the naysayer by giving some options. It makes it seem like I'm on board with crazy-ass plan and just trying to find a way to make it successful, like this:

"Ok, there are a few ways we could handle this:

Option 1 is to do ABC first which will take X amount of time and you get some value soon, then come back and do DEF later

Option 2 is to do ABC+DEF at the same time but it's much tougher and slower"

marcosdumay a day ago | parent | prev | next [-]

My favorite fact is that every single time an organization manages to make a functional development team that can repeatedly successfully navigate all the problems and deliver working software that adds real value, the high up decision makers always decide to scale the team next.

Working teams are good for a project only, then they are destroyed.

QuiDortDine a day ago | parent | prev [-]

Jesus I just had flashbacks from my last jobs. Non-technical founder always telling me I was being pessimistic (there were no technical founders). It's just not that simple Karen!