by kernoble on 6/14/21, 1:09 PM with 1 comments
When I was a junior dev I found this frustrating because there was an expectation to "act senior" before actually having that authority. Additionally, there was an unspoken expectation that you had to ask for it, which seems to just go against the (inaccurate) belief that so many in this field have that it's a meritocratic.
This seems especially disadvantageous for anyone who feels less comfortable in their role/standing and is less assertive for this or other reasons. I could imagine this is an even bigger problem for people who are different from the current makeup of the team/org, especially for people who are from under-represented groups.
What is your procedure for this as a manager or employee? Is there something I'm missing?
by bluefirebrand on 6/14/21, 3:50 PM
I think a large majority of companies are happy to simply extract as much productivity as they can from their workers and reward them as little as possible. Employees are treated as disposable resources, not just in software but everywhere. No one has a vested interest in helping people climb the ladder.
In software we're very lucky because we can often improve our income and seniority level by finding new jobs. Most workers don't have that kind of opportunity.