| Author here. There definitely are people, who perform better than others, even when the environment is not built to favor them and hinder others from performing well. If we believe that the talent within a field follows the power law, as suggested by this study (http://www.hermanaguinis.com/PPsych2012.pdf) it means that only 20% people in the field are high-perfomers, and something like less than 5% exceptionally high performers. When you look it from the perspective of scaling an organization it means that getting these people to your company will be very hard. 80% of companies are hiring within the "average or below average" section. The truly high-performing people, who are passionate about their craft are very likely to move to companies that are at the at the top of XYZ, where XYZ is the topic within software engineering that they're especially passionate about, pay well, etc. There was originally a section the article that tried to highlight "statistics", but I eventually left it out, because I did not find a good place for it: "Statistically speaking, it is much easier to create a "10x engineer" by creating an organization, where most people perform poorly than actually hire and retain someone, who really is 10x better at software engineering than an average person." In hindsight, I think there are a few things that could have been emphasized more, so the thrust of the blog post would have been clearer: - The title could have been better frased around the topic. - The context is companies that are growing fast and need to scale. - You likely have a company full of close-to-average people. |
Is there a source for this claim?
How likely are they to move exactly, and what motivates the non-movers to stay?