Superheroes are all around us. These are the people managers come running to when a critical bug appears in production. Or the people who sacrifice their evenings, weekends and vacation time for their employer.
I used to be one of these superheroes. I used to love being called upon when a critical bug appeared in production. It was great to feel appreciated. As software testers, we don’t experience this feeling of appreciation often enough and for me, it was addictive.
As I got involved in more projects, this superhero status became a problem. I wanted to experience this feeling of appreciation again when things went wrong so I was reluctant to share knowledge with team members. I would often be called upon when an issue arose.
At first, this felt great. When I was answering calls outside work, the praise kept coming. Soon enough though, this became what was expected of me. I was no longer a superhero in the eyes of management, but I was still putting in the excess hours.
Something had to change before I burned myself out completely.
In this talk I want to talk about how I developed a strategy to become the most effective employee I could be, but within contracted working hours. I learned to share knowledge, challenge excess work that landed on my desk and ensure that all the work I was doing was completed within my 9-5.
I want to share how you can be passionate about your job but also have a very healthy work-life balance.
Test complex APIs and microservices smarter—with confidence.
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Fri, 19 Jun
A half-day educational experience to navigate the world of AI
Gain the tools you need to become an operability advocate. Making your testing even more awesome along the way!
Debrief the week in Quality via a community radio show hosted by Simon Tomes and members of the community
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