| > Instead, when a PoC is done everybody involved needs to understand the implications. > Politics eat technnological semantics for breakfast though. I see where you are coming from, but I have to disagree. I am not debating semantics, but reality. A prototype will always have limitations. That is the definition of a prototype. I understand in reality sometimes it is worth to push through (startup), and sometime it is not needed but it is demanded. I am not starry-eyed, but it is useful to know what the reality is before one tries to bend it or adapt to it. If you want, Nature/laws of physics eats politics for breakfast :) Aligning incentives in this case could mean making the developer have a stake in the outcome (bonus), have competent people and clear deliverables, and bonuses for products that work well/convert. Not just for speed or busyness. Basically you are assuming a sort of feudal relationship between someone handing arbitrary deadlines and (whatever you must do) and someone in charge of implementing it having no say in anything, and obeying blindly. That is not how the best engineering is done. Places exist (I have worked in some of them) where people can be professional, and a lot still gets done at the end of the day, even more than with the stick and harsh words approach. A certain amount of back and forth is healthy and can produce much better outcomes for the company. |
It would be that politics eats tech, but culture eats politics.
And strengthening your PoCs is a predictable cultural consequence of any organisation where leadership forces PoCs in production.
For leadership to align incentives is to prevent engineers from suffering the consequences of PoCs pushed to production. What you described may work in some situations.
> A certain amount of back and forth is healthy and can produce much better outcomes for the company.
The reaction I described is a kind of back and forth, if a bit conflictual. However, it's leadership's responsibility to ensure that communication happens in a non-conflictual way.