Comment by imcrs

Comment by imcrs a day ago

24 replies

I've already kind of made it clear here where I stand on this, but I gotta tell you, you really do sound a lot like management.

Do you really think your superstar programmers are well and truly doing intellectual work, the kind of work that produces business value, from the time they hit the coffee machine at 9AM to the time they grab their briefcase to go home at 5PM?

If you believe this, I think you might be interested in bringing the Bobs in to discuss making our T.P.S. reporting process more efficient. They have thoughts on coversheets.

safety1st a day ago

In Deep Work, Cal Newport posits that even the most disciplined, high performers can do work that requires really focused attention for a max of four hours per day. He's a computer science professor, not exactly "management."

And these days, for a lot of knowledge workers there's a pretty strong case that anything which isn't this "deep work" can probably be automated.

So yeah if I'm paying you a full time salary I want those four hours. Without necessarily rendering judgment on what a moonlighting clause should or shouldn't look like, if I'm not getting those four hours, I don't want you on my payroll.

  • messe a day ago

    And you think you're more likely to get those four hours in an open office environment with distractions aplenty, as opposed to my effectively noise-proofed home office where I can actually focus?

    • dkga a day ago

      It really depends. I believe and apply a lot of Cal Newport advice, and benefit greatly from it. But I also see in my daily life how just being close to people you work with, and (crucially) being a short walk away/floor from people in other groups, creates immense value by helping unclog processes and especially by creating new ideas and products that wouldn‘t otherwise exist.

      • jeena a day ago

        Bullshit. When I'm in the office most of my time is spent on making sure it looks like I'm working and obsessing about if someone is standing/sitting behind me and looking at my screen or not, because I'm in a panopticum. There is no time for deep work.

      • himinlomax a day ago

        I don't think we read the same Deep Work book.

      • jakupovic a day ago

        Yup, short walt to my colleagues who are all spread across the world. /$

    • safety1st a day ago

      I'm on record many times saying that I think open office plans are a bad idea, so I'm not sure where you got that straw man

  • jakupovic a day ago

    First, nobody cares what you want. Second, do you pay for those 4 hours adequately, guess what if you don't? Even if you do, are you OK with 2 hours today and 6 hrs tomorrow? How about a year of 1 hour days and then a 24 hour period that fixes all the problems for last 2 years?

    • safety1st a day ago

      The Internet tough guy strikes again, as if employment is not a voluntary contract between two consenting adults. This militant attitude is always good for a laugh... hate management if you like, but if you think no employee ever worries about what their manager wants, sounds like you've never held a job.

      Not really sure why I am even responding to this amazingly stupid line of discussion. I mean if you absolutely hate the idea of having a boss (I know I did) then there is a solution for that - start your own company! It's not as easy as being a badass on the Internet, sure, but you might have to look at both sides of the argument and you might even end up getting rid of that chip on your shoulder.

      • jakupovic 20 hours ago

        Let me quickly go count my years of experience, will have to use all my digits and extremities, might be a minute.

        I don't think you got the point behind the comment. We do not have a good way to quantify effort, thus we ask for a fixed set of time in chairs, tickets closed, etc that's the best we can come up with.

lukas099 a day ago

I’ll attempt a steelman and say, no, employees are not doing deep work from 9–5, but I could see being in an office 9–5 setting the stage for a lot of deep work to be done. Moonlighting for another company I could especially see as detrimental to focus at work.

  • p_l a day ago

    The nature of modern offices pretty much prevents deep work.

    You're not going to get deep work when you pack people like sardines into neat rows of desks, where pretty much at any time someone within one row away is going to be in a meeting - conducted of course over teleconferencing software. Or some people will talk (honestly, being in the office mostly translated to chit-chat for me).

    • jeena a day ago

      This is exactly my experience too.

  • rustystump a day ago

    Deep work with an open office? Dont make me laugh. Please for the love of god bring back cubicles.

    The steel man is that in the office you get cross team pollination organically. Team lunches, talking about an idea with another team on how to do something better as in that moment the idea came up. This happens more often in person than remote.

    Does it need 5 days a week in the office? Absolutely not. 1-2 is plenty.

    • Terretta a day ago

      > Deep work with an open office? Dont make me laugh. Please for the love of god bring back cubicles.

      Or doors.

      25 years ago, Microsoft Redmond had a slogan: "Every dev a door".

      In early 2000s, it began to be two devs per room. We all know what happened since. Open offices save facilities concrete money per seat. Productivity lost from lack of deep work is not a line item anyone knows how to track.

      The "every dev a door" plus "pair programming" was shown by studies from groups like Pivotal Labs as being optimal for working code, but ... and a big but ...

      Companies intentionally optimize for things other than working code. You get what you measure and they measure what's easy instead of measure what matters.

      // See https://lethain.com/measuring-engineering-organizations/ but also https://lethain.com/good-eng-mgmt-is-a-fad/

legostormtroopr a day ago

I don't expect someone to do deep focused work from 9am to 5pm.

But at the same time, I don't expect them to spend their 9-to-5 working for another company at the same time.

As a founder, who respects the 9-to-5 and supports WFH, if I'm paying for 8 hours of work, I want 8 hours of output. Not 4 hours of output, and then you working 4 hours for another job.

If multi-jobbing becomes a thing, then WFH becomes untenable because at least in the office you can be monitored.

  • croon a day ago

    To be fair, you're either paying for hours or for output, because I assure you you are not paying staff accurately for their output. You can of course sack someone who outputs notoriously little, but if you get output exceeding your average "8 hours of output", you shouldn't care if someone made it in 1 hour or 16, or at least you wouldn't be able to tell.

    I'm using "output" as quoted in context, it's such a nebulous measure unless you're specifically buying a product.

  • imcrs a day ago

    Do you pay your programmers hourly or on salary?

  • agubelu a day ago

    How do you measure whether some output corresponds to 8 hours of work, and not 4 or 16 hours?

    • jakupovic a day ago

      He doesn't known what he is talking about. Bunch of wannabe founders waxing BS. If you want 8 hours of guaranteed output use a bot

moscoe a day ago

I’m sorry management hurt you.

It’s not your fault.

  • imcrs a day ago

    To be clear I'm having a lot of fun being snarky here.

    Like everything it's a mix.

    In seriousness, I do find the labor perspective sorely and quite conspicuously lacking in these discussions, both discussions about remote work and about DEI backlash.

    • a96 a day ago

      Because they're essentially always dictations, not discussions.