2011-04-17

2011-04-16

Amazing

Near the end of the work day yesterday a surprise popped up in the project chat window, in short, it was a message from one of the many "Team Leads" that said something along the lines of, "Thanks for all your hard work, take the weekend off." This message was shortly thereafter endorsed by the Lead of the Team Leads. What makes this so amazing is that the office work culture very highly promotes working on the weekend. This is further reinforced by the fact that any sort of "bonus" and/or recognition is based solely on quantity and not quality of work. It isn't so much working smarter, but more along the lines of work however many hours it takes to get the job done. Of course, the initial message included the familiar, "But if you are going to work then I will be available..." kind of statement. Why would someone say, "Take the weekend off" but then follow it up with, "But I'll be available..."? It seems to me that it was conveying the message of take the weekend off, but I want you all to know that I will be working because I am a "Team Lead" and that is what we "Team Leads" need to do. We need to set the example that we're going to be working on the weekend even though we said to take the weekend off.

Of course, when it all comes down to things in the end, these will be the folks recognized for "stepping up", "doing anything and everything they had to do to knock it out of the park" and so on and so forth. I've learned though, not to be forced into feeling guilty by not working over the weekend. Especially the truly frakked up way that the project is being run as I believe in Work-Life Balance and not Work-Life Integration.

2011-04-12

The Restless Haiku

Neglected acorn.
Will you ever awaken?
Long hibernation.

2011-04-04

Pondering

You know the question, "If a tree falls in a forest, does it make any sound?"

An interesting question that made me think of this one, "If a deadline comes and goes without anything actually being submitted, was it a deadline in the first place?"

I ask this because on numerous occasions my co-workers and I have encountered this wonderful process which we call, "The Fake Deadline". It starts off with a "deadline" date being given and a somewhat vague description of what is due. As the "deadline" date approaches, everyone is working at a fevered pitch because as things go, sometimes a plan does not go the way it was thought up, if there was ever a plan at all. People work late, work has to be redone all the stresses of a project that eventually culminate to a crescendo as the day approaches. For the most part, these "deadline" dates always seem to occur at the end of the week, either a Thursday or a Friday. Remember that because I'll be coming back to that.

Back to the "deadline", since the "deadline" date is reached and is "the stuff" due in the morning? Mid-morning? Lunch? Mid-afternoon? End of the business day? Five minutes before midnight? When is "the stuff" due? Well those of us who are in the trenches, that information seems to be classified since no one will tell us this information. One scenarios is sometimes a trickle of information gets passed down into the darkness and pretty consistently that information is something like this, "Blah, blah, blah talked to the client there is some sort of change, blah, blah, blah and now the new deadline is at the beginning of next week so we have to get this blah, blah, blah stuff done over the weekend. We'll need to have you guys work over the weekend to get this done so we can knock it out of the park for the client. Blah, blah, blah." So in that scenario, something magical happened and the "deadline" date MOVED to the beginning of next week so that means we are required to work over the weekend to get more stuff done. Hrm. Interesting. I think I've seen something like this before, wait! I have! You know the movie, "Office Space"? The scene when Lumburgh comes over to Peter's cube and starts to tell him that he'll need to come in over the weekend? For anyone that has seen that movie, you all know what I'm talking about.

The second scenario is more subtle, on the day of the "deadline" nothing is said and no information is passed. Everyone is working and working and working. The end of the working day comes and still nothing is known so therefore everyone continues to work and work. Dinnertime comes and goes, still nothing. The "deadline" day comes and goes and no one knows the better since this will also require people to work over the weekend since no one knows when the next deadline is.

So, is there a deadline or not?