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I've said it several times, in several venues.
Unfortunately, since I'm the departmental token paranoid, I'm not taken entirely seriously.
Software Zen: delete this;
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This is what modern project management is all about. I haven't seen a project "managed" any other way for a few years now. I call it "faith-based" management. Rather than managing requirements and/or schedule according to what can realistically be delivered, managers increasingly just pass if off to developers to make it all happen. If I could get their salary as well as mine (afterall, what are they contributing), it wouldn't be so bad.
Don't like it? Go get an MBA and join the "faith" community!
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My comment during the meeting was that our group was a victim of our own success. We've made too much of a habit of pulling miracles out of our asses. This time, however, there isn't enough Preparation H in the world to pull this one off.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Never Too Old wrote: This is what modern project management is all about. I haven't seen a project "managed" any other way for a few years now. I call it "faith-based" management. Rather than managing requirements and/or schedule according to what can realistically be delivered, managers increasingly just pass if off to developers to make it all happen. If I could get their salary as well as mine (afterall, what are they contributing), it wouldn't be so bad.
Don't like it? Go get an MBA and join the "faith" community!
There is this about your "faith" community...most of the time, they get to KEEP their jobs.
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I'd have put myself down as "Reasonably secure" but then had a meeting to say that due to the loss of 2 major contracts by our clients the deptartmental salary bill was now larger than the departments income.
Five days later (while on holiday) I got a phone call saying "You're redundant, don't come back"
I was planning to leave anyway but it was still a bit faster than I'd expected.
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There is no job security other than the ability to do the work, and sometimes, even that is not enough. You also have to be able to sell yourself.
During a rather lengthy period of unemployment (I had potential employers just say "no thanks" and hang up as soon as they learned that I was a C++ programmer in 2003; there was a tiny ad in the Dallas Morning News during that period for C++ programmers that made the TV news for causing a major traffic jam near DFW Airport), I developed several side businesses. Some didn't work out so well (I made a really lousy insurance agent), but some of them did well enough that I have maintained them as my plans B, C, and D.
Now, if I lose my current job, it will cut my total family income (my wife works, too) by 1/3, most of which I can make up in about 3 months by expanding my side businesses. I suspect that was a factor in getting my current job -- I was not desperate, and I could have just quit the rather unfulfilling job I had at the bank whether I got a new offer or not. That had a wonderful effect my confidence in the interview.
I'm getting old enough to be concerned about the next time that elderly C++ programmers go out of style (if you don't believe in age discrimination, you just haven't been around long enough). When (not if) the next crunch hits, I'll be spending about half my time teaching little kids how to play the violin, and the other half pursuing other businesses. I'm a fan of the "Incredible Secret Money Machine" by Don Lancaster (no longer in print; you can't buy a copy any more), and I believe it is necessary to make sure that the loss of one source of income doesn't completely wipe you out.
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Damn! That's a rough deal. I'm just changing my job after working 3 months notice that felt like three years. Although you are without a job it's a small blessing (albeit very small) to not have to work notice.
The plus side is you can step into a job where the requirement is urgent. There's no shame in redundancy so that shouldn't stand against you and gives you a legitimate reason to say that you are available immediately.
I wish you well.
Dave
Software Developer
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Rock solid employees should demand partnership , if denied then it wasn't that solid.
macmariman
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I tried to leave, than i got a talk from my boss, and my boss's boss on every reason why I should stay with the company... finally they backed up their position with money so i was persuaded. It's funny that they would rely soooo heavily on a simple contractor?
Einstein argued that there must be simplified explanations of nature, because God is not capricious or arbitrary. No such faith comforts the software engineer.
-Fred Brooks
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StevenWalsh wrote: on every reason why I should stay with the company
They would try to convince that way to appeal their bosses in showing a low attrition rate. But, at least in Indian environment, they would try creating a hostile atmosphere for senior people so that their 'favorites' can be brought up in compelling positions.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players.
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts... --William Shakespeare
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But that doesn't mean that they wouldn't try under some circumstances...
So Rock Solid, relatively secure...
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