(water is wet and fire is hot).

  • Cosmic Cleric
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    79 months ago

    Literally give them what they want: fast solutions at the expense of quality. Then don’t worry about it when things eventually break.

    You’re not wrong, but the problem with this is that the worker will be blamed for the bad quality, not the manager.

    In fact, it’ll be the manager rating the worker poorly because of the quality at review time, and they just won’t care or won’t connect the fact that the worker is not being given enough time to have a level of quality that would be acceptable to the manager.

    • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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      09 months ago

      That’s not how reality works. If your goals are time-based and you hit your goal, then you did a good job. Quality is different. It’s the managers job to balance speed and quality.

      You just say “I achieved my time limit for tickets” and leave it at that. If they give you incompatible goals, that’s the manager’s fault. Just tell them it’s not possible to do a good job quickly.

      • Cosmic Cleric
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        9 months ago

        I’m not talking about the literal who’s right or who’s wrong/fault, I’m talking about the politics, about who has the power, who doesn’t, and who can get away with mistakes by putting the mistakes on others.

        That’s not how reality works.

        I’ve literally seen what I’ve described happen, on multiple occasions, throughout my career. /shrug