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by aethr 2676 days ago
Some people just don't enjoy teaching that much. I think generally most people get satisfaction from helping others, but some devs just seem to prefer working mostly on their own. They still have to write pragmatic and maintainable code (the "dont make messes" part), and they don't level up others in the business, but they can still be incredibly valuable.

In smaller shops, there really isn't anywhere "further" to go past Senior unless you want to take on leadership of other devs. And it makes sense, in a lot of cases once you get to a certain level of experience the most valuable thing you can do is pass on some knowledge and act as a multiplier for others.

2 comments

You can lead without being a manager, eg lead by example, lead without force, lead by halping when asked, or providing guidance when asked. That's all mentoring. That's all pure technical. We may be agreeing.

But I wouldn't want to be in a place where there was just good at coding was the end of my growth.

At some point your effectiveness only comes from being a force multiplier - by helping other people getting ahead.