Our work can't all be exciting, how do you cope with the tasks that are just booorrrring?
Our work can't all be exciting, how do you cope with the tasks that are just booorrrring?
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Break it down to micro-steps in my to-do list, then just throw on music and plug away!
Oh my god. I scrolled down to the comments section to write the exact same thing.
I was thinking about this all last week. Monday I set a goal of mapping out our infrastructure to see what we could cleanup. Tuesday came and i still hadn't even logged in. Wednesday came and I thought
Thursday came, no bright ideas to make it exciting, so I just dove into a pomodorro session. Twenty five minutes later I had made a good start and mapped out all vms we used. Five pomodorros later, I was done! At least for that cloud provider.
It reminded me of something I learned from the Coursera "Learning how to learn" course recently, but is still not at the front of my mind:
Doing so in this instance I always had a quick feedback loop, every twenty five minutes, so it never felt boring. If I tried to sit down and focus solely on getting it done entirely I would have been frustrated. I do this when coding all the time, it just never occured to me to do it for other tasks!
In my case, I think of it as an input based rather than the output based, by doing an output based you're focused on how many tasks you've finished and be demotivated afterward if you didn't finish any, but by tackling the task as an input based, which time, in this case, you'll be much more motivated as you're seeing progress over the time you've worked on the task.
With interns, that's how.
More seriously, the more I move forward the more I feel that development should be layered. When you're starting out everything is new and exciting and the more you progress the more you need advanced stuff. But in the end there is not so much funky stuff out there.
So the organization I'm trying to figure right now with my company is having several layers of developers based on their experiences, the front line being juniors doing junior jobs and backed by another line of seniors that teach them how to unlock the funky stuff.
This way seniors are always busy with interesting-ish stuff and juniors are never blocked for a week on stupid stuff.
While it makes a lot of sense, it could also be really beneficial for your company to share the knowledge and do pair programming with juniors.
Yeah that's basically the idea. Back-up on specific problems is done through pair programming, this way juniors are always explained the fix
Sometimes it's nice to switch off and do a boring job XD usually whack on some comedy and blast through it mindlessly!
I've been a software engineer 20 years and never been "bored". If you find your work boring, that's probably because it is. Perhaps you've outgrown it and it's time to move on. If the company you work at lacks opportunities, it's probably time to move on.
All "work" involves occasionally tedious tasks: attending pointless epic meetings, filing TPS reports, etc. If it was fun all the time we'd pay to do it, and not vice-versa.
Procrastinate until deadline. Usually motivation comes by then.
I found the pomodoro technique the most efficient way to fight the boredom off as I am at the moment learning JS with a lot of frameworks and I am rocking 10-16 hours per day and I can vouch for it it helps alot
I try to remind myself why I'm doing the work in the first place. But not all work is fulfilling, so when that doesn't work I try to put some kind of challenge on it.
can I improve my efficiency while working on the task? That way I can get through the boring stuff faster as well.
Can I learn some other skill on top of it? Once when I had a data entry job I spent time learning all of the shortcut keys on the computer.
If that doesn't work, I try to be mindful of how working through boredom is a mental muscle in and of itself. I'm actively learning a new skill and its how to sit with and work through boredom. Similar to how part of dieting can be learning how to sit with being hungry if that's something you aren't used to. As my old coach used to say, "get comfortable being uncomfortable."
If it's something boring then it means it doesn't require a lot of my "attention", so I throw on a podcast or a playlist and plug away.
If it's going to take a long time then I make sure to get up and walk around every 45 minutes.
Listening to music while I do it. If it's reeeeally boring and mindless then listening to a podcast or a youtube video.
It's always possible to have some boring tasks from time to time and in my opinion if it's not a usual thing then we need to accept it and to not hardly try to stop it. In fact sometimes I like it when I give my brain a break doing routine or boring tasks 😅 .
byyy, asking questions like this, and looking at the answers sure are fun in some ways :). -> teaching & blogging
by doing some side personal project by implementing new technologies and best practices. we can get more idea and initiatives on what can be improved when doing the real job.
If it’s a mindless task, such as copy pasting a bunch of stuff with slight edits, I have a secret trick: automate it. Eg write a throwaway Python script that does the job for you. Tada! Boring text editing converted to fun Python scripting. :)
Can't all be exciting? Why not? Boring is what happens when easy meets not interesting.
I try to make all the tech work interesting by sprinkling in worthwhile extra challenges or ramping up collaboration.
Seems the more Sr. I get, the more many of the tasks become "boring," as you say. I call it "making license plates" (though I appropriated the phrase from Cryptonomicon).
I listen to music, put on anime/tv for background, heavily plan the effort down to the minutia. It also helps to split the day up with other devs fitting in a couple of pair sessions (teaching can be fun).
I also apparently post on DEV.
These are the things I try to tackle first on the day, that way everything fun is something to work towards and a reward for the rest of the day. Plus this makes it more likely I'll just keep working longer on things as they become more fun.
I try to automate them.
There is even a book about this : automatetheboringstuff.com/ :)
doing opensource stuff
One thing that I have heard of people doing within their company is a hackathon. Working long hours on a boring project is part of the job, but building something with your team, or smaller teams and presenting can be a refreshing break from something boring. I have friends who once every month or couple of months or at the end of their sprint, have a small hackathon. They get to learn something or apply new knowledge and hopefully have fun with it.
If it's possible, attack them first.
I have an inner strategy for my two weeks sprints, I always try to attack the boring ones at first days of first week and reserve the interesting for thursday and fridays.
Of course this only works for first week, because second is probably a rush of tweaks and hotfixes before demo haha.
I have a guitar lying around that I randomly start playing when I can’t think of what I’d like to do.
Also when compiling work related Angular apps
Add bugs to find later!
I try to squeeze value like adding automation as @mcsh has said. Side projects help too
Always change computers
I never get bored while coding! I get tired, but never bored...
Do something else, then come back later...
When a task is boring, I tend to listen to music and allow myself to take breaks during it.
Taking breaks where I scroll through dev.to or Github for new interesting things to read ;)
When it's one booring task then you just have to go through it, when there is more boring than exciting then it's time to move on.
This isn't possible....lol
Techno music makes boring work bearable for me. Pump adrenaline with the help of di.fm, and I'm golden.
like Shia LaBeouf said: just do it
Yeah sometimes I just tinkering a bit make some "interesting" refactor, scan the codebase for unwanted code step and after that back to the boring task 😄
Side personal projects and if i don't wanna code learn deeply of business side
Even if the task itself is boring, it's fun to figure out how to get rid of that boredom in a technical way.
Whose Line Is It Anyway on one screen, boring work on other screen
This is one my interview question..
For all the mundane work that hardly needs brainpower or focus... I just plug-in a good playlist and rock-n-roll through the task!
I'm great at doing boring work. I keep saying I'll do it tomorrow.
I am deeply offended by this.
Working on my side project
Side projects. And acceptance.
Bored? You can never be!
Hackerrank, editing resume, contributing to personal projects, prepare a to-do list, linkedin learning, tech twitter, dev comics
To keep up the enthusiasm I sing whilst coding or listen to some interesting non-technical lecture on YouTube whilst doing boring tasks.
Try taking little breaks to watch or do what you like to do to get out of the boredom. Once you refresh then get back to work.