DEV Community

Cover image for Interview with Ben Ilegbodu: Three Things That Compose Seniority

Interview with Ben Ilegbodu: Three Things That Compose Seniority

Jacob Herrington (he/him) on January 11, 2019

Today I'm sharing a conversation I had with Ben Ilegbodu. For those who don't know Ben: He is a Principal Frontend Engineer at Eventbrite and a me...
Collapse
 
erebos-manannan profile image
Erebos Manannán

In my view one of the more important traits of a senior is the ability to recognize that "ideal" or "perfect" are either myths or unnecessary and "good enough" is typically what anyone ever wants at the time.

Why waste your time looking for the perfect solution when you could already be done with the good enough one that fulfills all your actual needs? Just try to make sure you build software where decisions can be changed later.

Collapse
 
danroc profile image
Daniel da Rocha

Nice! Want to hear the episode but can't find your podcast on Overcast!
Also, the link above is broken... :(

Collapse
 
jacobherrington profile image
Jacob Herrington (he/him)

Thanks for letting me know. Here is a link to the episode: devpath.fm/episodes/principal-fron...

I'm still waiting on the green light from Apple for iTunes, which is how Overcast picks up their shows. Hopefully, it won't be too long. You can listen to it via the web player, Spotify, or a handful of other apps like Pocket Casts.

Collapse
 
danroc profile image
Daniel da Rocha

Cool! Let us know when it is out on iTunes! (it's just that Overcast is already deep in my routine of how I listen to podcasts...)

Thread Thread
 
jacobherrington profile image
Jacob Herrington (he/him)

Hey Daniel, I'm on Overcast now: overcast.fm/itunes1449224977/devpa...

Thread Thread
 
danroc profile image
Daniel da Rocha

Subscribed! Thanks.

Collapse
 
aschwin profile image
Aschwin Wesselius

A good senior, soon to be lead, needs the feeling to make compromises between the development department own needs and these from the business stakeholders.

It boils down to the "good enough" and the "ideal solution", but more often the balance tips over to either one side. This is all politics and not many developers like to be in that position.

Another capability a senior developer needs is being able to say "no" more often than "yes". And this is also something not many developers are aware of or like to develop as a trait in their career.

It's more about people skills than technical skills after all in this position.

Collapse
 
stealthmusic profile image
Jan Wedel

Leadership is definitely one of the most important things in my opinion. Seniority is not just time passed or experience or being fast. Those qualities apply to a larger number of developers. It’s about a developer that can lead other developers in the right direction and help them grow.

Collapse
 
fpuffer profile image
Frank Puffer

To me the main trait of a senior is the awareness that almost all code needs to be maintained and that maintenance often causes much more work than initial development. Code is not finished after it passes the tests. Others will have to read, understand and modify it.

Therefore a senior writes code not only for the machine to execute it but also for the fellow developers that will read it.

Typically, a senior is also good at understanding other people's code.

Collapse
 
jacobherrington profile image
Jacob Herrington (he/him)

Yeah, I agree with this. I think that falls into the intangible skill that Ben talked about: the ability to build the "ideal" solution. In most cases, maintainability is more important than some factors a beginner might be prone to focus on.

Collapse
 
hdennen profile image
Harry Dennen

Their ability to take a broadly scoped spec with vague constraints and then lead a few juniors to ship a maintainable and well documented feature that meets all the requirements that business couldn’t articulate. On time.