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by Clent
480 days ago
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It feels like you're just finding other ways to describe people who are senior in title only which is far too common. Any senior that uses their title to justify a 'you can't tell me way to do attitude, is a senior in title only. I think the term is the issue. Senior development means something more intrinsic than it does in other title, like a senior manager. I think what we're attempting to define is something closer to seasoned developer. |
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I'm fully aware of that, which is why "Senior" is in double-quotes, but experienced (aka "seasoned") is not. My point is that you can be seasoned at delivering bad products. The point about seniority just speaks to tenure at a company. Sure, you can join a company as a "Senior dev", but that's not quite what I'm referring to here. One would think that they would be exposed during the interview process, but alas, we all know that's often not the case.