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in reply to On Finding, Hiring, Inspiring and Keeping



My best job was eventually ruined by various circumstances. The company, however, was excellent.



The company was employee-owned, which may have had something to do with it. People were not fired frequently, and left very infrequently.

My second-best job wasn't in IT. It was at a movie theater. It offered:

This leads me to believe it's either the free food, or the parties, that make or break a workplace. However, "get the right people" has a strong ring of authenticity.


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  • Comment on Re: On Finding, Hiring, Inspiring and Keeping

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Re^2: On Finding, Hiring, Inspiring and Keeping
by apotheon (Deacon) on Apr 11, 2006 at 23:34 UTC

    That is an excellent comparison! Kudos! It really points out some of the finer details of why the first example was a good one. In general, it's more important to know why some strategies work than to have a laundry-list of previously successful strategies. Don't ask yourself what workplace characteristics are conducive to good workers: ask yourself why those characteristics work. The details can change, but the underlying reasons those details were good at one time remain the same. While you didn't specifically point out the underlying reasons per se, you certainly pointed out that the underlying reasons aren't dependent upon the form they take.

    print substr("Just another Perl hacker", 0, -2);
    - apotheon
    CopyWrite Chad Perrin