• peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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    19 hours ago

    The project manager keeps asking for an update every 15 minutes.

    Not only do I feel this in my soul, I’ve been working for almost 13 years, and to this day, I’m still not sure what a project manager contributes.

    The only thing I can tell is that their job is to be the designated impatient person.

    • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      I don’t work in software, I’m a chemical (aka process) engineer.

      Some project managers are superfluous if they don’t have a background being an engineer of some discipline themselves, but the vast majority I’ve worked with are excellent because they have a working knowledge of everything required to progress each stage of the project, and deal with most of the client interactions.

      Being able to say: “we’ve done x, but we still need y, z and aa to progress” and then the project manager organising this getting done together with the other discipline leads is a godsend, letting you focus on doing the actual calculations/design/nitty-gritty details. And the fact they manage the annoying role of dealing with clients and the disagreements around that is also great.

      This is working as a consultant, but I imagine if you replace clients with higher ups, I’d imagine the same still applies.

      Perhaps things are very different in software, but I do think there is some use for them.

      But I’ve never had one check up every 15 mins, more like once a day, and only if something is very time sensitive. Otherwise it’s once a week, or by email as required.

      • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 hours ago

        I’m a project manager for a team of IT systems, engineering, and infrastructure folks with just over twenty folks and my key purpose on earth is that I take one hour or less of their time once a week and by doing so they never have an email or conversation with anyone else outside of our team. I know enough to talk to any stakeholders and complete monthly status reports by simply knowing what is going on and communicating strategy to them. I’ve been praised heavily which feels very dirty being an individual contributor for so long in my career. I can speak the same language as everyone on my team spanning logistics, networking, systems, and software development but I don’t DO anything. I have major imposter syndrome as I near retirement so the praise is also appreciated greatly from them. It’s a really weird period in my career.

    • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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      18 hours ago

      Good project managers are invaluable. I’d much rather explain status to a sympathetic ear and have them reword it for diplomacy than try and directly advocate with executives - and I celebrate any customer communications I don’t have to be a party to.

      When PMs act like part of the dev team and handle the communication side of the project it lets devs focus on the important shit… and if your PM is asking for daily updates then they’re too green (or you’re too unreliable) to have built up a good level of trust. Nobody fucking cares if a project is delivered at 3PM or 4PM, so who the fuck cares about daily or hourly project updates - the status won’t be materially different.

      It’s like managers or fellow developers - good ones are invaluable and shitty ones make everyone’s lives harder… the difference is that PM seems to be a position that attracts do-nothing folks so it’s more likely you’ll get a shitty roll.

      • Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 hours ago

        They are the ones that talk to the customers so the engineers don’t have to.

        Often those customers are others in the same company.

      • bitchkat@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        The really good ones understand they are in administration and leave technical things to the technical people.

    • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      8 hours ago

      At my job, me and another guy were given stuff to work on. But unknown to product, there’s a lot of shared code there.

      In my imagination, it should be someone’s job to coordinate this. Instead, I finished a chunk of mine, he finished a chunk of his, and then there was confusion. Maybe that’s just a technical team lead’s job.

    • thefartographer@lemm.ee
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      16 hours ago

      I have a friend who was a project manager. He took the time to learn every platform used by his team, but held no pretenses that he could actually develop anything without the team. His main goal was filter all the horseshit from the stakeholders and higher-ups so that they wouldn’t overwhelm the team with minutia. By learning the platforms and observing the team developing, he could make accurate predictions on timeliness based on whatever arbitrary feature was being requested and he’d always answer “let me ask my team” before discussing deliverables if he wasn’t sure.

      The number of times that he explained in meetings that’s the team’s timeline didn’t change, but that the stakeholders’ expectations did and that introduced a new additional timeline was incredible. It’s unsurprising that he only lasted a year or two before his bosses started pushing for a promotion. Seeing him work made mean bit jealous that I couldn’t be on his team, but we work at different companies and I don’t want to join the private sector if I can be of benefit to public education.

    • NocturnalEngineer@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      They’re technically there to ensure the project has the correct resources aligned, and manage the project budget.

      Aka if they want timely updates, they can purchase & fetch me coffee! I don’t need them, but they sure as hell need me.