in reply to Re: Perl and Oracle Designer
in thread Perl and Oracle Designer

The issue here is bad management practices...address that and save yourself the long-term grief.

And of course, the management likes the STANDARDS thing because they think it makes them look professional and looks like they are doing something. Nevermind that we spend more time conforming to arbitrary standards than we do developing money-making software. *sigh*

I think Al McGuire was right; the world is run by C students.

--
tbone1
Ain't enough 'O's in 'stoopid' to describe that guy.
- Dave "the King" Wilson

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Re: Re: Re: Perl and Oracle Designer
by phydeauxarff (Priest) on May 12, 2003 at 14:02 UTC
    Actually, I think it is the Peter Principle at work.

    However, you have a responsibilty to your company to point out the inaccuracy of these assumptions.

    The trick will be to do so without seeming to be a pain in the posterior.

    Is there anyone else in your organization who sides with you on this issue?
    If so, perhaps you could approach management, in a kind way, to let them know you are concerned about how these bad pracitices are impacting productivity and the bottom line.

Re:^3 (Slightly OT) Perl and Oracle Designer
by hiseldl (Priest) on May 12, 2003 at 13:54 UTC

      Nevermind that we spend more time conforming to arbitrary standards than we do developing money-making software.

    If you can quantify this, and then translate it into dollars lost versus dollars saved, you'd have a case to bring to management to at least reduce the frequency of changes if not reduce the number of changes altogether.

    Example:

    • how many minutes per day do you spend making changes to conform to standards?
    • how many minutes are spent by the committee reviewing and changing the standards?
    • how many people are in the committee?
    1. measure these items over the course of one month.
    2. compute the number of hours
    3. compute the amount of money spent by multiplying the hours by the average hourly wage (you'll have to figure this out yourself)
    4. multiply this number by 12 to get the yearly estimated cost
    here's the kicker, ask them how much of this money being spent is benefiting the customer!

    HTH

    --
    hiseldl
    What time is it? It's Camel Time!