|
|
|
|
|
by NikolaNovak
1437 days ago
|
|
Ouchie, that's pretty nasty and uncharitable interpretation and feels like a needless attack to the poster :-/ There are people who decide early in their career to go technical and never change their mind. There are people who decide early in their career to go management and never change their mind. But there are a LOT of people in the middle, and that's been the overwhelming majority of people I (anecdotally) know in management roles - they were good at what they do so they were promoted to management - junior dev, senior dev, tech lead / architect... whopsie, now you're manager and you don't know how you really got there; or you found you are good at talking to customer, understanding their pain points, and are also good at helping and supporting your team, so you accept a promotion you never thought you would a decade ago. And any other number of permutations. But I do know any number of people who did not "make a different career choice". They simply were doing a good job and ended up a manager. Inertia is a more powerful career drive than many people acknowledge. |
|