> The bigger problem is that nobody wanted to work on someone else's codebase. Everyone wanted to work on greenfield projects and technologies that would look good on their resume going into the next job. Some of the most talented developers we hired were obviously only interested in using our company as a stepping stone to FAANG jobs (which didn't actually pay much more, but they were more prestigious on a resume so they wanted to switch).
This isn’t actually the developers’ fault, either. I think we need to blame the tech industry as a whole for this.
This isn’t actually the developers’ fault, either. I think we need to blame the tech industry as a whole for this.