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by jraph
1425 days ago
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Having to report every day during the daily stand up felt like micromanagement to me. But that's just me. Many people do seem like to have this kind of daily routine so your mileage may vary obviously. Having to fit tasks in two weeks periods was a problem too, with all these ceremonial meetings where we end up having to make things up and which actually take a lot of time. Being able to give feedback is good, but I don't like to be polled every two weeks on this in a far too long meeting, and waiting the end of the sprint if something is actually wrong is not ideal neither. We ended up merging shit code if the tasks actually needed more than two weeks and artificially splitting those tasks into smaller ones is a lot of overhead and can have deleterious effect on the code architecture. I think we were also not very good at planning a bit ahead so decisions needed to be taken and validated by the boss too often, which can feel like micromanagement too. Trusting your team about taking the right decisions is probably not an issue, if you have meetings where you make the general "big picture" (design) decisions all together. It'll probably help you notice that your team can make the good decisions too. But if you do have the big picture, it's a good thing you participate in this. I think small decisions should be left to the developers though. Not trusting they will do their job would be an issue. Good luck :-) |
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Same here. I used to be in a team with daily stand-ups, reporting to the manager what work I did the day before, and they killed my will to work, consequently causing me to work ~3 times slower, which presumably is the opposite of the intended effect.