Culture
This Startup Pays You to Learn How to Code 5 minutes read.
Wow, Wistia's Code School is definitely something you should check out - "Wistia actively looks to hire non-technical people who want to learn how to code, pays them to work in customer support, and trains them on how to become a software developer... Instead of culminating in a personal project or a thesis, they work on real-world problems, going straight from learning language theory to fixing actual bugs in the system." - Figuring out how to help your teammates grow while also providing value to the company is setting the right path for long-term success. How would you apply these ideas in your company?
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Onboarding New Hires — A First Day Without Bumps 6 minutes read.
If you ever asked yourself what you can do to improve your onboarding process, have a look at Elizabeth Hall's ideas (and template!). Having a smooth entrance is important mostly to reduce the pressure of getting lost in the details or faces. My favorite part is "New employees didn’t know *why*", so if you're tight on time at least make sure to read it.
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Should Engineers Design? 5 minutes read.
"Overlap builds trust and shared responsibility" - Cap Watkins is spot on. I've worked with engineers who had great instincts about product design. They were reading books, using different websites just to explore the UX and were naturally curios about the process of building products. I didn't understand how important it is to encourage engineers to provide feedback and ideas until I saw the massive benefits it can lead to. Do you encourage your engineers to be part of the design process? Do you encourage your designers to allow that openness for feedback?
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