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What Kind of PHB Do You Want?

the_radix asks: "I'm not a great coder, but I love computers and especially programming. Those professional programmers that I know often complain of their managers not understanding the coding process and having unrealistic expectations of programmers. As such, I am considering a new career path: management. Since middle management is all about balancing, I'm looking for pointers before I start looking for positions. What do you, as coders and programmers, want from your immediate manager? If there are any geeks out there in upper management, what do you want from your lower-level managers who keep the techs in line? I'm not asking for the basic 'stand-up-for-your-subordinates' advice, but rather requests from a coder's standpoint. Geeks have special needs, and accommodating those needs (and 'odd' behaviors) is a good idea all around, for both employee morale and department output." I think many of us would rather like one who listened or who would at least take advice from the technical staff to heart. Many times managers will not consult their coders when they make plans, they'll make the plans first and tell their coding staff later, and this causes all kinds of problems. Generally, a superior with less "pointy hair" is something we'd all appreciate, but I'm sure the rest of you can expand what I'm trying to say here, or even say it better than I can.

2 of 486 comments (clear)

  1. What type of PHB? by DAldredge · · Score: 1, Redundant

    3rd Edition 2nd Printing Players Hand Book...You can't beat the D20 system!

  2. PHB--What I want. by genkael · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I wish Wizards would just make a Players's Handbook (PHB) with all of the other character and spell books added in. I hate having to spend 20-35 bucks a piece for them when only the initial PHB is really worth it. Thanks for listening :)

    --
    GeneralKael -- Slacker Extraordinaire