Accurate Self-Assessment: Be the worst – Blog # 6 

As a developer, I have always thought that “being a small fish in a big pond” rather than “a big fish in a small pond” was a great advantage for career advancement, both as a way to advance your knowledge, skills, salary, and position. I learned an incredible amount from other developers at EMC, Nuance, and Kodak, because these companies had teams where many of the engineers were brilliant and knowledgeable yet had no problem meeting with me to share information, and help with difficult design and debugging challenges. Although I usually obtained more from these teammates that I taught them, enough situations came up when I was helpful to them that they were happy to help me when I needed them.

I usually took the approach of only “bothering” them when I was really stuck on an issue. This had the benefit of making me fully understand the problem, and therefore taking less of their time. Before I would ask for a meeting on such an issue, I would take notes on what the problem was, and then write down a list of questions to ask. I found that some of the time, when I did this, I was able to get the answer on my own. Another interesting phenomenon would occur quite often. I would actually be able to come up with the answer to the problem on my own as I was going through the issue with them. I would then get a response like “See Joe, you already knew the answer. You just didn’t know you did”.

The whole concept of “sink or swim” is quite interesting. When working in a challenging environment, I was always more motivated to learn the skills necessary to produce solid code than when I was one of the more advanced team members. Since most of my career was as a consultant/contractor, sinking at a company was less problematic than when I was working as a corporate employee. The expectations of working as a consultant were usually higher. You were treated less as a team member by some also.

I found, though that I really liked both worlds. About a third of my career, I worked as an employee, and enjoyed the benefits of “being part of the team”, getting paid vacations, going to conferences for free, and the obvious sense of security. The other two thirds of my years in software either contracting as a 1099 or W2, or when I hung my own shield with my corporation “Twinstar Enterprises Inc”.

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