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Main Authors: Krylova, Adela, Makarov, Roman, Pasynkov, Sergei, Bugayenko, Yegor
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.15021
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author Krylova, Adela
Makarov, Roman
Pasynkov, Sergei
Bugayenko, Yegor
author_facet Krylova, Adela
Makarov, Roman
Pasynkov, Sergei
Bugayenko, Yegor
contents In traditional management, tasks are typically assigned to individuals, with each worker taking full responsibility for the success or failure of a task. In contrast, modern Agile, Lean, and eXtreme Programming practices advocate for shared responsibility, where an entire group is accountable for the outcome of a project or task. Despite numerous studies in other domains, the preferences of programmers have not been thoroughly analyzed. To address this gap, we conducted a survey featuring seven situational questions and collected the opinions of 120 software development practitioners. Our findings reveal that programmers prefer tasks to be assigned to them on an individual basis and appreciate taking personal responsibility for failures, as well as receiving individual rewards for successes. Understanding these preferences is crucial for project managers aiming to optimize team dynamics and ensure the successful completion of software projects.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2403_15021
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Programmers Prefer Individually Assigned Tasks vs. Shared Responsibility
Krylova, Adela
Makarov, Roman
Pasynkov, Sergei
Bugayenko, Yegor
Software Engineering
In traditional management, tasks are typically assigned to individuals, with each worker taking full responsibility for the success or failure of a task. In contrast, modern Agile, Lean, and eXtreme Programming practices advocate for shared responsibility, where an entire group is accountable for the outcome of a project or task. Despite numerous studies in other domains, the preferences of programmers have not been thoroughly analyzed. To address this gap, we conducted a survey featuring seven situational questions and collected the opinions of 120 software development practitioners. Our findings reveal that programmers prefer tasks to be assigned to them on an individual basis and appreciate taking personal responsibility for failures, as well as receiving individual rewards for successes. Understanding these preferences is crucial for project managers aiming to optimize team dynamics and ensure the successful completion of software projects.
title Programmers Prefer Individually Assigned Tasks vs. Shared Responsibility
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.15021