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On the one hand: 100%. Agreed. Engineers experience enormous cognitive dissonance because companies & managers don't understand the very real problems they face. This article both say it, but under the title of being a mistake of engineers:

> Over the years, I’ve seen several engineers on other teams become less productive and then leave the company because they weren’t happy. Each time, I didn’t pay attention and stayed focused on my projects.

Yeah, most companies have a very very difficult time understanding the deep intricate knowledge-worker problems their expert knowledge-workers are deeply entailed into & care omg about. Only like 20% of these companies/managers even bother to figure out what the real intricacies are. It's fucked up. Yeah the engineers are distressed. But this is like >80% a problem of orgs not actually knowing wtf the situations really are. I've seen plenty of scrum teams have retro after retro where we identify real challenges, where we do good retroes, but as an engineer, our power to make anyone care at all or give a shit is limited. We can try to talk to someone we want to stay, but 9 times of out of 10, we have nothing to offer, no way to help. Trying to figure out how to make the org responsive or understanding is the challenge.

There is some good advice too, for engineers: Get to know your coworkers. Yeah. Do it. Don't just leave it to the managers & org. Culture never is top down, it's always a net-product. Links have to be forged at all levels. I think this is a huge challenge especially in the new hybrid/remote world.




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