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I think that if we are going to live in snarky-genius-programmer-land for a little while, it's best for management to set the "guideline of griping" if you will- - if a programmer who thinks of him/herself and/or is thought of by others as a genius comes to you and bluntly/opaquely describes their confusion over some code, just call them out as an idiot. Make them realize that if they are going to come and describe a problem they're having, and they're going to spend/waste your time doing it, they better have their ducks lined up and already have details ready. "Oh I understand what the code does, I just don't understand why the coder did it that particular way" is an admission that the previous statement wasn't a qualified one. It's an admission that the programmer had no intention of approaching management with a rational conversation on the topic, just a, "Hey boss I'm going to re-do this whole thing". No one wants conversations like that in a professional environment, people are too busy with actual real problems for that kind of thing. It takes a more technical manager than most IMHO to properly adjust for that kind of behavior, however. Many managers don't understand the technology as much as those they manage (perhaps it's different in strictly programming environments), and at some point "have to trust" what someone is telling them in shorthand. That is bad in this business. It may work in other industries, but it won't work here. A technical manager needs to be able to challenge a technical idea on it's merits, not on the aura of the challenger. It doesn't mean coders have to approach managers with a four-page paper rationalizing their need to tie their shoes differently, and as the team gets used to the increased communication and personalities, shorthand understandings relevant to the team will become used. But it should always be placed on the foundation of proof. Trust but verify. Treat your coders like adults, hold them to that higher burden of proof standard, and hold yourself as a manager to a higher technical standard to understand it, and the entire team can avoid this kind of junk. I come from network administration, and on medium to larger sized teams I've found that at first the smarter guys hate this method because they're used to being left alone to save the day. Being challenged ruffles their feathers in the beginning. After a little while, however, they realize that they're going to earn more respect because everyone around them, or at least their boss, is actually going to understand their brilliance. |