When does a programmer know when a new job is not right?

Posted by Mysterion on Programmers See other posts from Programmers or by Mysterion
Published on 2011-01-31T19:07:18Z Indexed on 2011/01/31 23:33 UTC
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I believe that the interview process is a selling of both parties - what can the employee offer the employer and vice versa.

Assuming an individual has been careful in selecting their new employer (via thorough questioning in the interview process), however when they arrive at the job they find the employer has not been honest about certain aspects of the job. Examples of this dishonesty could include:

  1. The employee making it clear that technical excellence is an important factor, which is promised by the employer, but is not fully delivered or a good technical structure does not exist.
  2. The employee states they want to work on well architected and short (lets say less than 1 yr) long projects, yet when they start they find they are placed on a poorly architected older project.
  3. The employee being told of a pair programming environment to get him up to speed on the project, but being left to his own devices/questioning on arrival.
  4. The employee is promised a culture that encourages innovation and technical excellence but finds that this is not the case (eg. using technology for knowledge retention is laughed at).

I know that a lot of famous developers feel that you make the place you work at. Is it realistic for a new employee with limited experience in the industry (say less than 5 years) to be able to join the company and change attitudes or even challenge the employer on the perceived dishonesty?

Should they stay in this job or cut their losses?

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