In this episode, Dave and Jamison answer these questions:
I’m a junior software engineer who has been placed in charge of a handful of graduates and interns who have joined my team. The project is fairly technical.
For the first two weeks, the new starters were pair programming. That went well, and after talking to each new starter they were eager to start working individually.
We’re one month in and I’m concerned about the performance of one of the engineers, “Morgan” (fake name). Morgan has completed a degree from a good university we often hire from but appears to lack any knowledge of software development. As a result, Morgan seems to struggle with researching and working through problems beyond following tutorials. I got the impression that while pair programming Morgan didn’t contribute much.
Is there anything I could do to give Morgan the boost needed to start rolling? I’m sure I could spoon feed Morgan, but it would monopolize my time when I’m already spending time with the other new starters on top of my own tasks.
I want to give Morgan a shot, but I don’t know what to do. At what point do I tell my manager about my concerns?
Things I’ve encountered:
Even all these issues in aggregate would be fine with me, but the continual resemblance and behavior of a stunned mullet isn’t encouraging. After being told to research a concept, Morgan must be told the specific Google query to type in.
Thanks, and apologies for the essay!
Listener Confused Cat asks,
I spent just over four years on a team where technical growth was lacking. Recently, I transitioned to a new team within the same company, and I’m enjoying the atmosphere, the team dynamics, and the opportunity to engage in more challenging software development tasks. Fortunately, my motivation is beginning to resurface.
However, I’ve noticed that my technical skills have become somewhat rusty. While I can still deliver systems and features, I feel like I’m falling behind compared to some of my peers. This self-awareness is causing me to doubt myself, despite receiving no negative feedback from my current team or supervisor. It’s not just imposter syndrome; I genuinely feel the need to upskill.
How can I navigate this situation effectively? What strategies would you suggest for advancing my skills while holding a senior position and preventing feelings of inadequacy from affecting my performance?
Episode 254: Code makes my body hurt and level madness
Episode 253: Not coding after 2 years and fake data scientists
Episode 252: Impossible documentation and unexcited coworkers
Episode 251: Working with real live developers and the royal we?
Episode 250: The management track and active listening
Episode 249: Settling the Wild West and credit for self-study
Episode 248: Non-private slack channels and expectations
Episode 247: Estimates and hotdesking
Episode 246: Humanitarian salary conundrum and family benefits
Episode 245: Sweating the small stuff and quit my first job?
Episode 244: Quitting telephone and recommendontion
Episode 243: Saying no and conference
Episode 242 (Episode 131 re-run): Stinky feet and high salary expectation
Episode 241 (Rerun of 184): Indispensable and IT cold war
Episode 240: Under-leveled in the big leagues and pushing back
Episode 239: Hustle and patents and toxicity
Episode 238: Naughty team and quitting after 2 weeks
Episode 237: Salary vs tech stack and how to quit an ad agency
Episode 236: Making mistakes and Lowball offer
Episode 235: Bus factors and toxic time bomb
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