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A Common Programmer

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A Common Programmer


This blog is mainly musing about eXtreme Programming, Java, Ruby, Agile Programming other IT centric topics.

The name of my blog comes from what I am, over the last several years I have had a lot of fancy titles (especially during the bubble): Senior Programmer, Team Lead, Software Architect, but when it came right down to it I always did the same job. I was always the same thing.

A common programmer.





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Location: Salt Lake City, Utah, United States

I have been programming since 1984, no I am not that old, I was a young teenager learning BASIC on an Apple-clone, a Franklin, I think. I currently program in Java, Ruby and in emergencies C#. I work for a software company, CompuSoft Development in Salt Lake City, UT.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006
 

Determining Business Value



Today I am going to make some broad statements: We write Business Applications; most programmers today write Business Applications. But how much of the business does the average programmer know?

When was the last time yous looked at a Quarterly Sales Report, a Balance Sheet, an Income Statement? Don any of those reports mean any thing to you? How does what you are doing affect the bottom line of your company? The more telling question in my mind is do you even care? And are you willing do so something about it?


Why should we care? Isn't our job all about sling code? Churning out the RTF's that the customer told us they needed this release, or this iteration. We don't need the information the Balance Sheet will give us to help us code, or design, or test or any or the multitude of mundane tasks that make up a typical day in a common programmers life.

Chad Fowler wrote an excellent book(My Job went to India(And All I Got Was This Stupid Book) 52 Ways to Save your Job) with more than one reason that you should be interested in the business end of your company, Chapters 21 and 24 specifically.

But I'm not just talking about saving your job. I'm talking about making you a better corporate citizen. I'm talking about figuring out where you and your team fit in the company and making an impact. Maybe you aren't a software company, so your company doesn't sell the product you develop. Then find other ways to make you contribution make a difference. Those Running Tested Features should make a difference to the bottom line. Find out how. That is my challenge to you. From one common programmer to another. 



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