Becoming a 10X engineer (is it possible?)

Written by fullyfunctional | Published 2017/04/08
Tech Story Tags: productivity | agile | software-development

TLDRvia the TL;DR App

According to the myth, there are engineers who can contribute 10X more than their peers. I don’t know whether this is possible or not, and I haven’t got a good metric for productivity (right now, does anyone?!). I’d want to be one of the engineers who contributes 10x more so I need to find a way to measure and drive self-improvement.

If we use Peopleware as a guideline

* Count on the best people outperforming the worst by about 10:1.

* Count on the best performer being about 2.5 times better than the median performer.

* Count on the half that are better-than-median performers outdoing the other half by more than 2:1

If I rate myself as a median engineer at Microsoft, then I’m looking to have 2.5X more impact by this time next year.

Step one: Finding an initial metric to judge impact.

There’s no point in performing an experiment without having a metrics,

  • Lines of code written (very dependent on framework/language/project life-cycle)
  • Number of bugs found (potential would vary widely by task and project)
  • Number of tasks completed weighted by complexity/time estimated (as long as tasks are tracked)

Number of tasks completed seems like the least flawed metric. I believe it might be a blend of all 3 and more…

Step two: Finding out how I work

Initial theory, if I can track how I spend my time I will be able to optimize it to be more productive.

Data I might be able to collect

  • Time spent on workstation (windows event logs?)
  • Active application (some windows service?)
  • What I’m reading in Chrome (chrome plugin)
  • Amount of time in meetings (outlook calendar)
  • Amount of time spent helping others (call history on Skype, currently remote)
  • Overall satisfaction with day (daily survey before leaving work?)

Slightly less on topic but maybe correlated

  • Number of cans of soft drink vs water (part of daily survey)
  • Time spent at lunch (windows event logs?)
  • Time spent walking around the office (windows event logs?)
  • Number of tabs/applications open (some windows service?)
  • Amount of sleep (some sleep app)

Task: time to start writing services to collect as many data points as possible!

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Published by HackerNoon on 2017/04/08