Monday, January 11, 2010

Live to Code

For Christmas my wife bought me a copy of Michael Symon's new cookbook Live to Cook: Recipes and Techniques to Rock your Kitchen. For any non Clevelanders and Food Network aficionados Symon is the head chef and owner of several successful restaurants in Cleveland and Detroit and is also an Iron Chef on Iron Chef America.

Now, I don't consider myself a chef and I don't regularly read cookbooks. In fact the gift may have been a not to subtle hint that I need to bone up on my culinary arts. That said I have taken to Cleveland and enjoy reading a bit about local people doing what they love and the various landmarks the city offers so I opened Symon's book and found something slightly unique. Hidden between the various recipes and techniques are some short descriptions of his inspiration as a chef. What drives him to do what he does and how he just loves to cook. It got me thinking about programming and some conversations I've had with friends in our local community.

In the book Symon speaks of passion, and how in his career thus far the most successful people he has worked with haven't been the best trained or the people with the most experience on the line but rather the people who were most passionate at what they do. It's an observation that carries through to programming and I imagine any other career where people take pride in the craftsmanship of what they do. In my, admittedly short so far, career I've had the opportunity to work with some incredibly talented and bright people and they all had one characteristic in common, they were passionate. You could get them talking for hours ad nausium about software and what makes clean code. How to best structure an algorithm or what new and exciting technique they were learning now.

In the book Symon tells a story of his first restaurant after school. He recalls how it was a small  30-40 seat place and he worked under a head chef who was self-educated. Despite the individuals lack of "formal" training Symon speaks to how much he learned from the man and how he gravitated to him as a mentor because of the passion he showed. His examples are things like an insistence on using fresh garlic and not pre-peeled garlic despite the hours of prep time required and manually roasting peppers instead of purchasing them preroasted. In other words, the details are what mattered to this individual and Symon maintains that he adheres to those same concepts in his restaurants today. This to me is analogous to the Test Driven and Behavior Driven Development movements. In our profession we spend time identifying the details of an application in advance. Planning it out in essence by writing tests against how the code should function. By doing so we ensure a cleaner more quality driven end result.

From a business perspective the analogy continues. In software you have your McDonalds and your Lola's and there really is nothing wrong with being either one. The key is in knowing who you are. If you want to be the Lola of the software world you're going to be focused on quality, delivering the best product your customer asks for and your work will demand a premium because of it. If you're McDonalds then your going to deliver quickly and afford-ably but it may not be as good as the premium competition.

That said I'd much rather frequent Lola than McDonalds.

1 comment:

  1. Originally from Kevin Berridge -

    Good observations, I totally agree. Passion isn't a requirement to being a development, but it is a requirement to being one of the _best_ developers.

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