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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Corporate Politics 101 By Allen C. Kratz, Builder.com July 05, 2002 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/business/soa/Corporate-Politics-101/0,139023166,120266379,00.htm
A class in navigating corporate politics will never make its way to a computer science curriculum, but it's a skill you need to develop. A Builder.com member offers first-hand advice. Computer science curricula fail to cover one basic skill set required of programmers with aspiration of one day becoming managersââ,¬"navigating corporate politics. Here are a few bits of advice that I've learned to safely manage my career -beyond the code." Prepare for a -New Diplomacy.
Perception is reality.
Be overorganised.
Don't be afraid to admit mistakes. One of the pearls of political wisdom is to simply not be afraid. Once a mistake has been made, you can't change it, and any attempt to gloss it over or hide it will eventually backfire. In fact, if you take responsibility for your mistakes, you can actually make your handling of the situation a political asset. On one of the first large projects I managed, a piece of testing was not completed, and we ended up with an unacceptable production bug. Rather than deny the situation, I worked with the appropriate people to resolve the bug and complete an analysis of the process that failed. In the end, my resolution was more of an asset than the failure was a liability. While I doubt that corporate politics will ever be a required college course, stick your head out in your new role and learn what you must to make the move from coder to business driver. In the end, there's no substitute for the school of hard knocks.
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