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by markus_zhang 1686 days ago
A lot of people praised Welch back in the day. I don't understand all these but maybe he was not that shiny after all. So the trick to be a successful and loved CEO (or anything) is to take ownership of something, beautify the balance sheet and get out before it explodes.

This also applies for software engineering. Try to start a new project in some company, and you get the privilege of:

1. No need to maintain other shit mountain;

2. Get to start your own shit mountain;

3. Can come back as consult and win big bucks

4. Can speak at conferences about "How X is implemented in company Y"

1 comments

This is an almost universal problem in any endeavor. Everyone loves heros and visionaries, few give any respect to diligent maintainers, so we have a world of shiny, fragile new things on top of crumbling older ones that haven't kept up. Whether its software, infrastructure, equipment or corporate structure or whatever, incentives make it always like this.
Yeah I believe it's just human nature. Can't do much with it except that in my career I'll pay more respect to the maintenance people and others who are sweating for someone else's glory. The glorious guys already get glory and big buck so they don't need anything else.