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hahahahhaah 12 hours ago

Thw word hired is doing a lot of work.

Is motivation intrinsic to a person.

Or is it a person plus situation.

Ot is it person, situation and reason (reason given in interview)

I have been most motivated when there was an aha in the interview process. Or a "cooll!" feeling. For me usually about the end product over the tech stack. I like to work on things I like to use myself.

tyre 11 hours ago | parent [-]

I think motivation is contextual. When I love the mission of the project I'm working on, I'll put everything into it. When I hit a prolonged wall of politics or poor leadership, I'm not going to operate at 100%.

There's a trifecta that works well:

1. The job is what the employee wants to be doing (IC, manager, FE/BE, end product or mission, whatever).

2. It's what the company needs. (Don't let a high performer do something that's Priority 10 just to keep them.)

3. It's what the employee is good at. (This includes areas of growth that they have aptitude for!)

People in those situations, in my experience, tend to thrive. It's great that you've recognized the kinds of products (ones you use) that give you that.

Something I don't think hiring managers do enough is convince applicants not to work there. Have a conversation to discover what the person wants. If it's not this role, that's totally fine! It's far better to help someone discover what they love than hire someone into something they won't.

OhMeadhbh 11 hours ago | parent [-]

i stopped reading and upvoted this comment right after you wrote "i think motivation is contextual." i cannot agree with you more.