| >It’s crazy to me that people take massive salaries and expect other people to spoon feed their tasks to them. I remember being one of two software engineers working on a project in a small company. We were cooperating with two bigger companies delivering other parts of the system. I kept asking myself: "These guys have hundreds of well paid engineers working on this, and they never deliver! Are they sabotaging the project?". In the end we delivered the finished prototype and the customer ran a 48h acceptance test, their parts fizzled out almost immediately, while ours just kept running. It took me a few years and joining a bigger company to notice that thinking about what you're doing is not expected in bigger corporations, where everything is bureaucratized. Also if the company is big enough it can shift the deadlines set by its customers. It drove me near madness whenever a colleague said something "wasn't their job". I never heard such an attitude before, and these people were paid twice as much as in my previous company. I still, to this day, hope that a lot of these people get replaced by computers. Defective programs can at least be improved. |
“Not my job” people tend to be the most frustrating folks to work with. While I understand wanting to mainly do the work you were hired for, there are always going to be times where you have to roll up your sleeves and do something different.
I wish I was the kind of person who would thrive in that environment because it sounds nice, but I’m not wired that way.