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A culture of curiosity: how to grow, nurture talent in the post-PC generationWe have become disconnected from the "why" of things. Today, everybody seems to be pursuing the making of money and, if we are all trying to produce money, you tend to wonder who is producing anything useful. You can see this attitude at play all over South Africa as politicians, businessmen and community alike squander precious time and resources that will ill-serve the next generation. The fact that Juju is a national joke and not in jail, speaks volumes. Now what has a political rant got to do with Dev Culture? Well, it's got to do with principles that somehow have been lost over the last couple of generations. Dev Culture reinforces meritocracy and relevancy... it accommodates both skill and experience - after all, code doesn't lie. Dev Culture has less to do with manufactured short-term goals and more to do with a desired end state over a known arc of time. When commissioned to undertake a new project, the next thought that pops into a developer's mind after "Cool" is "When do I need to do this by?" Innovation, insight, knowledge Innovation requires insight, and insight comes from knowledge - a thorough understanding of the objective of the product. The further the layers of separation between the executives who direct the project and the hackers whose job it is to create it, the longer the development cycle and the less effective the product. We have all heard the tech legends: how the core principal of Facebook was coded in a weekend, or how Woz wrote circuit board magic in four days for Jobs to create Atari's Breakout. Maybe, those overnight 'flukes' aren't exceptions. Maybe, when you invite hackers to the table, you create opportunities for insight to be translated into action. Dev Culture is entrenched in the solving of a problem. You need them in the room, because their essential animating force is a curiosity that will empower them with enough data to hack the world around them. Change agents looking for a mission In effect, they are change agents looking for a mission. The more you keep them away from your organisation's centre of power, the more you are discarding a strategic company resource. Yet, all too often, when it comes time to flesh out strategic projects, developers are invited in when the discussion is all over. In effect, they are handed the spec sheet and told, "Go and build this." Of course, technical innovation doesn't track executive-suite comfort zones. So the scenario where the developers chuckle over the choices of approach and technology, shake their heads and build it anyway is an oft-repeated one. Now I can imagine many eyebrows being raised and thoughts of "He wants me to invite Kenny from Dev to offer his opinion! Nuts!" Studio boy bands vs indie bands And if Kenny is anything like the typical developer in SA, you'd be right. SA doesn't really encourage a developer culture and, unfortunately, the BSc graduates churning Java code for Nedbank or Absa aren't really living in a Dev Culture environment. They are more akin to studio boy bands, whereas Dev Culture needs the indie bands, of which there are woefully too few in SA. But we can create many. We just need to understand geeks a little better and, in the application of some basic principles from yesteryear, you can achieve some interesting results. I don't want to suggest that somehow building an app dev studio is a simple formula that you can apply to every situation. Human beings are all different and each tribe of coders may gel together in different ways. But in the main, encouraging curiosity and innovation has some standard requirements. So how do we get some respect for developers?
About Anice HassimAnice Hassim is the CEO, Founder and majority shareholder of the immedia ecosystem. He is a speaker and educator around digital trends, strategy and marketing, and helps brands better understand and negotiate the digital space. Contact Anice on tel +27 (0)31 566 8000, email him at anice@immedia.co.za and follow him on Twitter at @anicehassim. View my profile and articles... |