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by evujumenuk
528 days ago
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Do you receive financial remuneration for your services as an engineer? Then I'd say you're engaging in an ongoing business transaction. As such, the parties to the contract this is happening under will each evaluate whether continuing the existing business relationship is worthwhile. You may think that this kind of deliberation is outside of the context of what being an engineer is, but it's certainly not outside of the context of what being an employee is. If you wish to be an engineer and not be saddled with business stuff, don't demand compensation, or only token compensation, which is what I alluded to at the end of my last post. In the context of business, all parties need to constantly prove that what they're providing is worth more than what they're asking for. You can work at a company that asks for "impact", and be given a degree of agency for determining which problems are worth solving, and solve them, hopefully leading to increased revenue, reduced costs, or reduced risks. Or, you can not do that, do whatever Jira asks you to do next, and have no case as to why the company should give you more money or indeed continue to employ you in favor of another engineer who can demonstrate more of an "impact". |
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I acknowledge that, and I am also pointing out that it isn't very helpful as a goal for something that is meant to be a specialized domain. Telling them to "create impact" is borderline tautological. Obviously every employee needs contribute and make the business money, but it should be up to the stakeholders and leadership to be a little more specific as to what the goals are, and let the engineers focus on doing engineering.
For example, we see a lot engineers transition to management because of this kind of expectation that running the business is always the priority. This causes a lack of domain specific expertise which is filled with new engineers, which causes a lot of inconsistencies in the software systems, which creates complexity, bugs, slows down development, etc., and this costs a lot money, just because engineering is being underestimated in favor of doing more business-centric tasks.