This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Cesar Aguirre
I originally posted this post on my blog a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.
Want to demotivate your dev team? Guaranteed results in 10 simple steps:
#1. Ignore ideas and suggestions. If anyone comes with an idea or suggestion, ignore it. And if anyone raises a concern, say “it’s fine and it used to be worse.”
#2. Take credit for someone else’s idea. If anyone comes with an idea and you don’t want to ignore it, say “oh, that was what I told you we should do.”
#3. Don’t share any vision or project goals. Just keep your team closing JIRA tickets. Tickets and more tickets.
#4. When someone asks for a salary review, say “come back in a few months.” And then, tell them to come back again. And on and on.
#5. Once a task or project is finished, publicly praise someone else’s work.
#6. Give your team boring and repetitive work. The more boring and repetitive, the better. Make them dig holes. Then make them fill those holes.
#7. Make them work on projects no one will use. Did your team work on a project for six months? Archive it, deprioritize it, or make sure nobody uses it.
#8. Your team worked hard, but why share what the users think? That’s not their business, right? Don’t share any user feedback or testimonials. Just keep them finishing tickets. See #3.
#9. Use the word “resource” to refer to them and treat them accordingly. Your team members are machines you can replace anytime.
#10. Lay off people and tell the ones who stay “nothing is happening.” And if they ask about it, tell them they should be grateful for still having a job.
Follow these steps and you’ll have team members who will leave you at their first chance.
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This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Cesar Aguirre