Challenges - knowing when to say no 1
Many dynamic and energetic developers I have known share a characteristic of reflexively accepting the challenges put to them by their organisation. I think many people are just wired that way - they are presented with a challenge and their sense of self worth or their desire to please or whatever it is compels them to accept it; and beat it.
What do you do when the challenges are nonsensical, not worth doing or based on clearly broken assumptions. In a ‘can do’ culture that places a high value on ‘being pro-active’ a challenge can often take on mystical properties that make it unasailable and immune to rational questioning or discourse. If it was uttered thus must it be worthwhile.
It takes a lot of guts to say to someone (especially someone you report to or someone in a position of substantial power) “your challenge doesn’t make sense, I refuse to accept it”. In such organisations rejecting a challenge is often worse than failing the challenge itself and you may run the risk of being labeled a recalcitrant, nay-sayer, lazy or worse.
If a friend came to you and challenged you to invent a perpetual motion machine, would you accept or reject the challenge? Kooks aside, most of us would reject it and we wouldn’t judge ourselves by the standards of the challenger - we’re not failures because we refuse to invent a perpetual motion machine. We know it’s sheer folly.
Organisations should do the same when they’re forced to into a Mythical Man Month scheduling ‘challenge’ by overzealous upper management eager to make their mark. Adding manpower to a late (or tight) project will just make it later (or tighter) and we shouldn’t be afraid to rebuff a challenge to come up with aggressive project plans based on the assumption that “men and month are interchangeable”. This, too, we know is sheer folly.
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