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Atlassian Changes Annual Performance Reviews To Stop Rewarding 'Brilliant Jerks' (businessinsider.com.au) 432

Australia-based Atlassian"has implemented a new performance review strategy designed to give their workers a better evaluation of how they're performing," reports Business Insider, adding that Atlassian's global head of talent said the company wants to measure contributions to a larger team effort. "We want people to get rewarded for what they delivered." In 2018 it soft-launched a strategy where most of its performance review process will have nothing to do with the skills in an employee's job, but more to do with how well they are living with the company values. Now, the strategy is being rolled out permanently and will be tied to employee bonuses... "We want to be able to evaluate a whole person and encourage them to bring their full self to work and not just focus on skills itself, but really focus on the way they do their work," said Bek Chee, Atlassian's global head of talent. She added that while workforces have changed over the past 30 years, performance reviews, for the most part, have stayed the same...

With this performance review system, Atlassian aims to throw out the idea of the "brilliant jerk", which Chee describes as someone who is technically-talented, but perhaps at the expense of others. Instead it is focusing on how an employee demonstrates the company values, how they complete their roles and how they contribute to their team. "We really want to enforce the way that values get lived, the way that people impact the team and the way that they also contribute within their role.

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Atlassian Changes Annual Performance Reviews To Stop Rewarding 'Brilliant Jerks'

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  • What a great way... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @02:44PM (#58961330)
    ...to launch a row of anti-discrimination lawsuits from medically socially challenged individuals?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If you can't work well with others, we don't want you. Google has the same internal policy -- it's called, informally, "the assholes have left the building". It doesn't matter if you can write a single line bash script to replace Gmail. If your attitude brings the company down, you leave. End of. No bullshit ASD diagnosis gets you out of having basic etiquette for others.

      • by zifn4b ( 1040588 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @02:59PM (#58961412)
        So basically if you're an effective sociopath, that's good. You don't need competency just the ability to kiss ass strategically really well.
        • So for effective sociopaths, no need to worry. It's business as usual for you. Just keep doing what you're doing.
        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          You don't need competency just the ability to kiss ass strategically really well.

          You have just stated Atlassian's entire business strategy.

        • I much, much prefer to be spit in the face than stabbed in the back.

          Unfortunately, I seem to be a minority opinion in this society.
      • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:03PM (#58961450) Homepage

        It's weird, then, that there are so many assholes that work at google.

      • Wish I had mod points. Nobody says you have to be popular.

        • They seem to be saying that you have, though.

          Asked if it would be possible for someone who did well in their role to be outscored by someone who did poorly but was more likeable, she said, “Not really, because in order to get the highest level rating you have to meet the highest bar on all three factors. Those people would get the same rating.”

      • If your attitude brings the company down, you're probably the CEO.
      • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:38PM (#58961628)

        ... doesn't matter if you can write a single line bash script to replace Gmail ...

        How about in Perl? :-)

      • "The Company" is a moneymaking machine.
        It is not the set of employees.
        If the "asshole" helps the company make more money, it makes more sense to keep them.
        If the "asshole" helps the company make more money than the people they tick off, then it makes more sense to let the people they tick off go.

        Ultimately, work is just the sale of labour. Everything else is secondary to that.

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @10:18PM (#58963012) Journal

        If you can't work well with others, we don't want you.

        That's a failure of management. A good management helps people with different personalities get along. Otherwise, what are they doing with their time? Sitting in bug triage meetings? You can do bug triage meetings and help people get along.

        It doesn't matter if you can write a single line bash script to replace Gmail. If your attitude brings the company down,

        It isn't the guy writing amazing code who is bringing down the company.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @02:59PM (#58961416)

      You know a company is dysfunctional when they have a public press release about a new performance review strategy.

      Perhaps they should implement it and see if it works before preaching to the world.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It's a recruitment ad. Fed up of jerks being rewarded at your company? We don't do that!

        • Sure they do, they're going to do it even more now than before. Actual productivity requires getting actual work done with other people, and sometimes that means discomfort. What they're going to reward now is the most manipulative backstabbing sociopaths.

        • Fed up of jerks being rewarded at your company?

          No. As a socially inept Aspie, I am one of the "jerks". But we get the work done while others are socializing and playing office politics, and at meetings we cut through the sugarcoating and get to the facts. Companies that weed us out may be nicer places to work, but also more likely to fail.

      • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @06:16PM (#58962278)

        For many companies I would agree, but this is Atlassian.

        Their business consists of mediocre software that is minimally capable of doing basic stuff, wrapped up in a cult of executives and consultants that believe regularly writing checks to Atlassian is a requirement of being "Agile" and that "Agile" is a synonym of fixing people problems with processes (exact opposite of original intent of Agile, but that's reality). They don't have particularly good technical capabilities nor would such ambitions really change their bottom line.

        A key "evil" in commercial software development is getting stuck with an irreplacable guy. Sometimes that guy is a jerk, but sometimes they aren't. Either way, it rubs the company the wrong way that they actually have to care about retention because of this guy. There is a tendency to at least believe the person is a jerk because that justifies their frustration regardless of fact.

        So Atlassian furthers their image as a company that is so good at processes, they are comfortable ditching the concept of the irreplaceable employee. So keep writing them checks and eventually your company too will feel free to lose or get rid of employees at will and Atlassian driven processes will save you. All while wrapping it up with the more sympathetic "brilliant jerk" narrative.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      TFA defines the brilliant jerk as someone who puts their own success first and walks over others to improve their own standing. The tolerance for neurological diversity only extends to the point where it's not actually sabotaging other workers.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 21, 2019 @02:46PM (#58961342)
    I'd rather work with a 'brilliant jerk' than whatever the opposite is. The bigger the jerk the more brilliant he's gotta be.
    • The bigger the jerk the more brilliant he's gotta be.

      But usually not brilliant enough to be worth putting up with. If he's so damn good let him become a consultant and see how well he does.

    • by LaminatorX ( 410794 ) <sabotage.praecantator@com> on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:00PM (#58961420) Homepage

      I'd prefer to work with someone who is brilliant and also not a jerk.

      Let the brilliant jerks start their own firms where they can pay people what it takes to put up with their crap, or do freelance work where they only interact with a PM.

      If I want someone for the long term, jerk-dom is a deal-breaker. A jerk, no matter how brilliant, brings everyone else down. In contrast, someone who is brilliant and not a jerk can elevate and encourage the merely bright or even just adequate people around them to perform at a higher level.

      • by nashv ( 1479253 )

        >I'd prefer to work with someone who is brilliant and also not a jerk.

        You don't say, Einstein! That never crossed my mind. /s

        Except it did. Of course, everyone wants a brilliant benevolent teddy bear/mentor to work with. The reason brilliant jerks are tolerated is not because they are jerks. It's because they are brilliant. And sometimes, they can be invaluable to a particular project because of said brilliance. It may bring everyone else down, but it is a matter of whether their brilliance compensates

      • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @08:33PM (#58962758)

        If I want someone for the long term, jerk-dom is a deal-breaker. A jerk, no matter how brilliant, brings everyone else down.

        Jerks are already filtered out by the system. Managers don't want to deal with them, co-workers don't want to work with them, HR considers them a headache because of all the complaints they generate. They're fired at the earliest opportunity.

        Consequently, the jerks who survive aren't just brilliant, they're incredibly brilliant. So much so that, contrary to your claim that they bring everyone else down no matter their brilliance, their technical brilliance brings everyone else up more than their social offensiveness bringing them down. That is, they stick around because their net contribution to the company is positive.

        They only way to filter them out more is for society to become less tolerant of their behavior. That increases how much their social offensiveness brings people down, resulting in their net contribution becoming negative. Trying to exclude them from your company at the hiring level will simply result in them being hired by other companies, who then eat your company for lunch thanks to their contribution. Your company (and your anti-jerk principles) then disappear in bankruptcy, while the jerks survive.

        • by Chris Katko ( 2923353 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @01:14AM (#58963620)

          The truth of the matter is: Productivity matters more than your feelings of comfort.

          If I hire a lawyer who is a complete asshole, but NEVER LOSES. I'm hiring that fucking lawyer without the slightest apprehension. I will put up with him talking down to me as i laugh all the way to the NOT jail.

          Nobody (READ IT: NOBODY) is arguing that assholes need to be rewarded for being assholes. The difference is, when someone is downright MAKING the company (say John Carmack at iD software), people care more about his incredible contributions than whether or not they like him.

          If you go to work to LIKE your co-workers, you have a fucking luxury the majority of the world doesn't. The rest of us are trying to pay bills and put up idiots. If we could exchange idiots for "equally asshole, but brilliant hard workers" we'd up-trade for that any day of the week.

          • If I hire a lawyer who is a complete asshole, but NEVER LOSES.

            No such thing. Understanding people is a requirement for being an effective lawyer. If your lawyer is being a complete asshole, that means they either don't understand people, or they have a chip on their shoulder, either of which will impede their work.

            The same thing applies to technical work: You're building systems for people to use. If you do that without caring for people, then you're going to do it badly.

        • If I want someone for the long term, jerk-dom is a deal-breaker. A jerk, no matter how brilliant, brings everyone else down.

          Jerks are already filtered out by the system. Managers don't want to deal with them, co-workers don't want to work with them, HR considers them a headache because of all the complaints they generate. They're fired at the earliest opportunity. Consequently, the jerks who survive aren't just brilliant, they're incredibly brilliant. So much so that, contrary to your claim that they bring everyone else down no matter their brilliance, their technical brilliance brings everyone else up more than their social offensiveness bringing them down. That is, they stick around because their net contribution to the company is positive. They only way to filter them out more is for society to become less tolerant of their behavior. That increases how much their social offensiveness brings people down, resulting in their net contribution becoming negative. Trying to exclude them from your company at the hiring level will simply result in them being hired by other companies, who then eat your company for lunch thanks to their contribution. Your company (and your anti-jerk principles) then disappear in bankruptcy, while the jerks survive.

          Does repeating this to yourself help you sleep better at night? In my experience the jerks are brilliant at manipulating the system and doing everything they can to look like they're more productive than they usually are.

          I've worked with some pretty big jerks in my time and some have actually been brilliant. But in all of my years the most brilliant people have actually been quite kind and always willing to take a moment to teach or to help their team out. I'm actually working with the biggest group of br

    • by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:22PM (#58961534) Homepage Journal

      I work with actually brilliant jerks. But the jerkiness judgement seems to come from the technically incompetent who the 'jerks' don't like putting up with. When it comes to solving hard problems, there is nothing better that a few brilliant jerks who respect each other for their technical competence.

      • I work with actually brilliant jerks.

        I work with people who believe they're brilliant jerks. Well, they're bang on 1 out of 2.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Is there some link between being brilliant and being a jerk? Can you be the former without being the latter?

        • by Aristos Mazer ( 181252 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @06:12PM (#58962254)
          It's tricky. I've worked with many people who really are smarter than me and everyone else in the room. There's only so many times the smart person can politely say, "Are you sure? Have you thought about that?" or walk through an explanation again before they reach a stress point where they think to themselves, "Wow, you're all idiots, and I can't seem to explain it to you because you're being willfully ignorant because you don't want to admit that this is beyond you, so I'm just going to force you to do it my way by bullying you."

          It is a hard thing for any of us to admit that someone else is way smarter than us in our own field of expertise. But failure to acknowledge one's own limitations brings out the jerk in other people whose superiority we ought to be acknowledging. Sometimes I've been an outsider of a group and watched the group dynamics and thought, "X acts like a jerk, but it's because Y keeps insisting Y knows how to do things and keeps screwing up." I don't know if there's anything to be done about that.

          Yielding doesn't mean just giving up. But it does mean cheerfully acting on faith and trying to learn what you thought you already knew. I try to keep it in mind, because there are some areas where I'm that expert talking to a room of people who wish they had decades of experience in the field like I do. I try to yield when I'm not the lead brain in hopes that others will reciprocate when I am. It's hard.
    • by lenski ( 96498 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:24PM (#58961546)

      "Brilliant jerk" tends to be more jerk and less genuinely brilliant.

      The brilliant people that I've worked with have a few characteristics in common:

      • Know their shit and are confident enough to do their thing without being assholes about it.
      • Do not put up with fake bullshit.
      • Know how to manage interactions with those who are willing to learn where necessary.
      • Get the work done consistently.
      • (with rare exceptions) Tend not to focus on the social; neither sucking up to the bosses nor getting all chummy with coworkers to look good.
      • When faced with major challenges, get down to the work without fanfare.
      • When asked about the work, can explain clearly and succinctly what is going on and where they are headed with it.

      I have worked with assholes that think they are brilliant and talk constantly about their qualifications but collapse into bullshit when faced with real technical challenges. Those dipshits bring everyone down, and the effect is exacerbated by lazy management unwilling to figure out who is the competent one and who is the bullshit artist. I am optimistic that Atlassian is at least aiming for competent management, rather than soft-hearted "process" or coddling those who are unwilling to step up to get the work done without demoralizing those who really are competent.

      • by Dixie_Flatline ( 5077 ) <vincent@jan@goh.gmail@com> on Sunday July 21, 2019 @06:03PM (#58962218) Homepage

        Well, and the one big important thing: they know that their knowledge has value and so they pass it on.

        Every brilliant person I worked with that I would actually call brilliant also had a strong ethic to make the work of others around them better. Everyone will put up with someone who is a bit abrasive but honestly works well with others, knowing that no one person can make the whole product.

        So-called Brilliant Jerks tend to have a high hit-by-a-bus factor, because they are so convinced they are the only person that can get the job done. Even great work can be useless if nobody else knows how it works and the jerk leaves.

        If these jerks are really so good, they can make apps on their own and do fine.

        • Know their shit and are confident enough to do their thing without being assholes about it.
        • Do not put up with fake bullshit.
        • Know how to manage interactions with those who are willing to learn where necessary.
        • Get the work done consistently.
        • (with rare exceptions) Tend not to focus on the social; neither sucking up to the bosses nor getting all chummy with coworkers to look good.
        • When faced with major challenges, get down to the work without fanfare.
        • When asked about the work, can explain clearly and succinctly what is going on and where they are headed with it.

        The highlighted items above are why those people are considered or referred to as jerks by their peers and, on occasion, their. bosses.

    • I’ve worked with “brilliant jerks” before. The ones I’ve known tended to get in the way of other people trying to get their own work done. I wonder if that’s sometimes an intentional part of their strategy - trying to look even better by actively interfering with those immediately around them.

  • Bek Chee (Score:5, Insightful)

    by melted ( 227442 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @02:47PM (#58961346) Homepage

    Quote from the original article regurgitated by linked article: “We recognise things are not the way they used to be, yet companies haven’t evolved (from) 30 years ago when they were primarily made up often of white men."

    Can someone explain what any of this has to do with "white men"? I get that it's trendy with the Twitter crowd to shit on white men. I also get that Bek is not a man. But overt racism and sexism like this is just ugly, even if it's not against a minority. What happened to valuing people for their contributions rather than discriminating on the traits they didn't choose and can't change?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The phrase "white men" does not appear in either article, neither the Business Insider one or the Atlassian blog post.

      Where did you read it? You can post the URL?

      • Re:Bek Chee (Score:4, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 21, 2019 @04:34PM (#58961880)

        https://www.news.com.au/finance/work/at-work/atlassian-ditches-brilliant-jerks-in-performance-review-overhaul/news-story/82a5e2abba1939f51d68ae81db8f05bd

        My guess is they removed the controversial parts after someone pointed out how racist and sexist they are. The current Atlassian post still has some parts in the same vein, e.g. the "This can be especially true for underrepresented minorities or women" paragraph.

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      It seems Business Insider concur, as their article currently has no mention of white men.

      Which is good, as the race and gender of employees is entirely irrelevant to whether they're brilliant and/or whether they're jerks.

      • > Which is good, as the race and gender of employees is entirely irrelevant to whether they're brilliant and/or whether they're jerks.

        History, modern psychological testing, and surveys disagree with this claim. The correlation of birth gender with abuse, achievement, and intellect are strong, though they are certainly not the only factor, and correlation is not the same as causation.

        Do you need pointers? Wikipedia has a number of articles, many with excellent references.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Thanks to the AC for providing a link to the article you are talking about:

      https://www.news.com.au/financ... [news.com.au]

      In context the quote doesn't seem to be racist, it's just stating a fact that the demographics have changed a bit over the decades, and citing that as a reason to come up with a new rating system that is more suited to the current situation.

      This could be an interesting debate, but you played the race card so...

  • Bubble (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @02:47PM (#58961348) Homepage Journal

    The tech industry is in a bubble. They lose $200 million per quarter, but the stock is sky high and the company has a market cap of $34B. Completely delusional. Once the bubble pops, all of this nonsense gets thrown out and the firing starts.

    • It did pop once when Dotbomb happened. The companies individually pop all the time. It's a dynamic process.

      2008 was not a big deal. It did not topple any of developed countries governments (I mean like USA or France, not shitholes like Greece). Even "Great Depression" did not topple American government.

      Crisis is when 1917 happens, not when 2007 happens.

  • How tight do the balls have to be squeezed before a person yells?
  • A big mistake. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    This what happen when organizations value process over talent. Both Brilliant Jerks and Awesome Team Player have a role to play in an healthy organization. One is a disruptor and creates new ideas and one promotes stability.

  • I can't wait! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 21, 2019 @02:53PM (#58961374)

    I can't wait until this bubbles through to surgeons and the people who design airplanes.

    "Well, he may not have known how to sew up your artery again after your abdominal surgery, but he fits our company culture so very well. We're sorry you died on the operating table."

    • I can't wait until this bubbles through to surgeons and the people who design airplanes.

      You're right; Boeing should keep doing whatever it is they're doing.

    • That's an absurd idiotic analogy.

    • "Well, he may not have known how to sew up your artery again after your abdominal surgery, but he's handsome and charismatic. We're sorry you died on the operating table."

      Seriously, this is a site of Nerds, yet we're fawning over alpha males. How many times in your life has one of the alphas been completely incompetent save for good looks and charisma? How many hours have the people on this forum put in doing the _real_ work while the good looking and personable types reap the rewards?
  • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:05PM (#58961458) Journal

      How many of those "brilliant jerks" are really just jerks who have bullshitted management into thinking that they are brilliant?

    • It is true that when you come into a company and write code 10x faster than your coworkers, then your coworkers can get intimidated, and can feel that every comment you make is hostile. Sometimes it's easier if you go slowly at first, and then little by little get faster until you are working at full speed. It gives people time to trust you.

      Annoying but true.
    • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

      In the 80/20 rule, it's someone from the 20% who makes the 80% feel bad no matter their behavior.

      That is an oversimplification. What we are talking about is mental health and how much mental illness a person is carrying. I see the company ignores that issue and instead puts it onto the individual, regardless if their performance and commitment to what they are doing is consequence of their mental illness or not.

      Cut the crap about toxic people

      No way. Toxic people exist, they're as real as the personality disorders making them behave that way get. How much of 'a jerk' some are is an expression of their internal dialogue.

      The

  • I'd be a jerk too (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ShieldW0lf ( 601553 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:06PM (#58961466) Journal

    If I was a brilliant developer who was better at solving technical problems and writing functional code than my peers, and I worked it a place that failed to reward me despite the fact that I was carrying the less capable team members on my shoulders, I would be a jerk too.

    Naw, I lie. I wouldn't be a jerk. I'd just quit, and go work for their competition, and eat my former employers lunch.

  • }}} ... "We want to be able to evaluate a whole person and encourage them to bring their full self to work and not just focus on skills itself, but really focus on the way they do their work," ... {{{. They say they want to get rid of the "brilliant jerk," one who is smart but doesn't play nicely with others. I've been getting rid of brilliant jerks for decades. I tell them they don't play nicely with others, and give them a poor rating in that area. Simple.

    .
    To me it sounds as if they just wanted a

  • by Lanthanide ( 4982283 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:23PM (#58961538)

    Apparently one of their company value is doing what's right by their customers, yet they have at least a dozen feature requests for their flagship product JIRA that have been open for at least 10 years they have not addressed.

    Some of these things are *extremely* basic functionality that all bug trackers should have, and some of them have no real workarounds.

    Off the top of my head here are the 3 that impact my company on a weekly or daily basis:
    1. No ability to give system fields default value. You can use custom fields for this but this brings its own problems (one of several documented below).
    2. No ability to delegate project creation permissions - only global admins can create new projects, there's no way to split off just that simple permission from everything else.
    3. If you have a particular custom field that appears on 2 issue types, if both of those issue types appear in the same project, they must both have the same default values. Eg if you have an Issue Description field and you want to have a Technical Debt and a Bug issue type, then whatever default template you put in that field to fill out will have to be the same in those issue types. There is a non-intuitive clumsy workaround for this if you have Scriptrunner for JIRA plugin, which IIRC is an annual cost of $1400 for a 500 user instance.

    Anyone considering JIRA for their company would be well advised to trial it first. Luckily my company can persevere, but for some there will be showstoppers.

  • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:29PM (#58961572)
    I fired the most productive person in our company because she was a jerk. I'd do it again if I had to, too. Unless it's a one person organization, there's no room for a toxic person in an organization. Even one person can bring down an organization if they're destructive enough, whether that's intentional or not. In my case, either this one person was going to have to run this whole company by herself, or she had to go. While I miss the work this person did, I'm 100% glad that I did what I did. There's no room for jerks in our organization, regardless of their productivity.
    • I fired the most productive person in our company because she was a jerk. I'd do it again if I had to, too

      That's a failure of management. You didn't know how to help your underlings get along. Next time you should get yourself the proper training. If they are actually brilliant, they can be mentored.

  • Atlassian aims to throw out the idea of the "brilliant jerk", which Chee describes as someone who is technically-talented, but perhaps at the expense of others. Instead it is focusing on how an employee demonstrates the company values, how they complete their roles and how they contribute to their team.

    Yes, discount the jerk who knows what he/she's doing in favor of those that "fit in" and "toe the line" ...
    (admitting that House was a HUGE, tedious asshole)

    Ep1: Patient died. Ep2: Patient died. ... Ep177: Patient died.

  • If they didn't include "Plays well with others" in their performance reviews before this change their system was completely broken and they should have fired all of their HR staff (who are obviously a bunch of jerks anyway).
  • If you do work there, carrying a large capacity voice activated recorder everywhere would probably be wise. Recordings can save you from vague charges of conduct unbecoming of a corporate drone.

    The biggest thing to avoid is being stuck on project teams with more than 1 or 2 people who can't do their job, this includes project managers...

    Just sit back, keep your chin up. nose to the grindstone mouth closed and nod your head when appropriate. Never criticize or complain or look funny at someone when they sa

  • by NotSoHeavyD3 ( 1400425 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @03:53PM (#58961702) Journal
    Is that a good portion of them aren't actually brilliant but they are jerks. They're just really good at self promotion and have realized most of the time nobody looks that closely at what they've done or can't actually judge it. Management only finds out when they try to give that project sustaining.
  • The standardized reviews I've taken part in have sections for 'role-dependent skills,' teamwork, and demonstration of company values. In fact, I was once dinged on teamwork skills, basically being called the 'brilliant jerk.'

    I countered that my skills and integrity to the success of the company often put me in a position of advocating a minority opinion, or speaking inconvenient truths. Further, it was exactly these characteristics that the company valued, and I pointed at the list of achievements over th
  • BOOM! POW! SLAM-DUNK!

    What can I say . . .

    FTA - Atlassian aims to throw out the idea of the "brilliant jerk", which Chee describes as someone who is technically-talented, but perhaps at the expense of others.

    Holy Jumping Catfish - they just FIRED SLASHDOT ! ! !

  • ...Superiority complex? There used to be a term for the behavior these, 'brilliant jerks', exhibit. It was called a, 'superiority complex'. I don't really care about the real issue being discussed. The term, 'brilliant jerk,' is just absurd to me. You want to complement an asshole before you call them a jerk? Not to mention the term sounds childish to begin with.

    It's called a superiority complex and very intelligent/competent people are sometimes afflicted with one. Einstein was, 'brilliant'; your
  • by ndykman ( 659315 ) on Sunday July 21, 2019 @07:51PM (#58962636)

    To be honest, I probably fit more in the brilliant jerk category myself, I never really learned to work with people to get things done and I had little tolerance for technically inferior work; doubly so for those that claimed it was much better than it was.

    The problem is that there needs to be balance. Somebody with technical excellence that at noticeably different level than other teammates can easily become a target for being a jerk.

    I finally recognized this behavior recently when people would constantly ask me questions or bait me. Then again, for health reasons, I'm no longer working as a software engineer full time.

    But that shows the real threat of jerks, brilliant or not. They rise by draining others. A high functioning average team beats a team with a genius vampire feeding on coworkers in long term. Then again, when has tech these days ever acknowledged the future in which they aren't the youngest, most energetic, most knowing.

    I miss real engineering cultures and the companies that had them. Real mentorship, real learning. Technical conflicts were allowed, but disrespect was not. I remember really heavy discussions only to have a nice lunch with the same people the same day.

    These days, you have junior and senior coders that mistake their arrogance for confidence. We talk of the bubble popping, but maybe it's best to just deal with toxic individuals without resorting to a massive economic contraction to sort it all out.

  • who can fix problems at 6am, 9 pm?
    vs a nice person who can try and understand the problem?
    Hire on merit.
  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @01:32AM (#58963688) Journal

    This is a great example of how shaming is justified by citing "apex behavior" as the reason for social control. The social control is that if you show signs of brilliance that demonstrates your capability to outperform others around you then you are, by inference, a jerk.

    I see radical new ways of how socially manipulative people can put the burden of performance on people who can deliver by calling them out as a jerk if they don't co-operate. These type of policies show scope for serious unintended consequences, the first example being:

    Our definition of “individual performance” is intentionally weighted to include amplifying the work of others.
    or
    This can be especially true for traditionally underrepresented groups who tend to volunteer for (and in some cases, are assigned) a greater percentage of work related to team building

    My advice to techheads here is to go further with this than they expect you to. If you are a brilliant with kernel internals, stop that and organize a cake day and make sure it counts as part of your performance evaluation. Don't wrestle with regular expressions implemented in your visitor pattern, instead take time out to get in touch with your emotions on why "Demanding Bitches" aren't scrutinized and sometimes even celebrated. Point out how manipulative they are and see how far it gets you in your next performance review. I can assure you the personality disordered have already factored your dissatisfaction into their manipulation to paint you as the bad guy - it's what they do.

    Technology used to be a "safe space" for male bonding with your peers yet even that has been shamed with the snide term "brogrammer". I see more and more feminists invading tech the same way they invaded the left and are using it to dole out social control to the men and women who refuse to conform. The women I met in this environment who were able to excel did so because they were excellent, not because they needed to bring the standards down low enough so they could participate. They earned their respect by performing in masculine space, not conforming it.

    Here we clearly see the toxic-ally masculine feminist narrative playing out, demonstrating their power by associating negative emotional traits to aspirational masculine attributes such as brilliance and capability as being somehow jerk-like.

    Sure, we all know that guy sometimes we are that guy however men have been bringing them down a peg or two all by themselves for a very long time without the requirement to emote using strategies that are clearly designed to introduce ambiguous metrics to provide scope for coercive manipulative tactics. That EQ is behavior and IQ is capability is ignored. IQ is a trait, EQ is learned and you had better learn gentlemen because otherwise you're just not a team player. As if teams don't have star players.

    So what comes after this [whimn.com.au] you might ask?

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @03:26AM (#58964016)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion

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