DEV Community

Cover image for "Waiting times" at work.
Natalia
Natalia

Posted on

"Waiting times" at work.

Hey guys. We all know that this happens - waiting for a new project, a new task... Sometimes it happens for days or weeks. What do you do then?
Normally I read about my technology stack, do some challenges, look for inspirations on Dribbble or CodePen. But what do you do? Can you recommend something creative?

Top comments (17)

Collapse
 
ben profile image
Ben Halpern

Seems like a great time to blog. If I were unable to tangibly contribute with code, I feel like I'd turn to writing... about something I'd done lately or maybe something new I'm learning. And then I'd make a few DEV posts πŸ˜„

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

That's what I'm doing! πŸ’ͺI'm gathering even more material for next blog posts πŸ˜„
Oh btw - you think it's better to "import" whole blog post to DEV or just import description and leave "read more" button to the main website?

Collapse
 
skryking profile image
Jason Ormes

I generally catch up on conference videos on youtube for whatever technology I find interesting at the time or I think might help in the future. Generally gets listed as professional development time on my time reporting.

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

Catch up on conference videos πŸ€” sounds like a plan for me! Thanks! :)

Collapse
 
ssimontis profile image
Scott Simontis

Ask your manager what you can do to help, there's probably something he or she is struggling with. If they can't think of anything, what bothers you about the company right now? Is there anything you can do to fix that by contributing something? Are there obnoxious tasks you can automate?

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

Yup, that's what I'm doing right now :) I'm automating business work :)

Collapse
 
jeromegamez profile image
JΓ©rΓ΄me Gamez • Edited

At the company I work at we have some internal projects that we can jump on to and off from that are not mission critical but make internal processes a little more enjoyable. Our iOS and Android developers are working on a time tracking app that hooks into the API of our otherwise web based time tracker. Our Java-Developers started on a Slack Bot for Standups (which went public in the meantime in case you want to check it out: olaph.io). I work on some tools that integrate the services we use, and otherwise like to spend my time on open source PHP libraries. Thatβ€˜s one of the things that I like about our company: we are encouraged to improve ourselves by working on projects like this, and at the same time can enhance the visibility of the company by doing it.

So, even when we have some idle time customer project wise, we can always stay busy \o/

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

Wooo I've used Olaph in the previous company! :D Great work guys! :)
And thanks for ideas, it actually helped me! :)

Collapse
 
rudolfolah profile image
Rudolf Olah • Edited

That's usually referred to as "slack time" and you're lucky to find yourself in that situation.

If you're working at a consultancy or freelancing company, that could mean you're "on the bench" which isn't always so good because that means no billable hours. If it's a regular software dev shop, then you've got salary and they expect you to provide 1.5x to 2x (minimum) value for the salary.

I would recommend checking out Safari Books Online (accessible with a $250/year subscription to ACM) or LinkedIn Learning. Learn an additional skill that complements your current skills, such as backend/server coding or DevOps with Amazon Web Services or sales/presentation skills (always useful when trying to be persuasive and convincing in a corporate environment).

Essentially, you want to learn new things that will transfer over to other jobs as well.

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

Yea, it's more like when you come to a new company and you are waiting for the project. When you are between projects - that's an easier thing to manage. I'm trying to read something up for the next project but you know how it is - something will always distract you. Yet you are right - cleaning up some technical debt from old (even private projects) is a good idea! πŸ‘

Collapse
 
idanarye profile image
Idan Arye

When you come to a new company, your first duty is to learn. So if you have available time until someone gives you a task, try reading the docs of the project you'll need to work on, or playing with the product to learn what it does and how you use it.

Collapse
 
fiknahs profile image
Kofi Osei

Honestly, i just binge watch Anime. Bad habit really, i should probably stop, i guess?

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

I'm up to date with all Anime this season so πŸ€·β€β™€οΈ:P

Collapse
 
th3n00bc0d3r profile image
Muhammad

One: Read a Book

Two: Write a Blog

Three: Write your own Book

Four: You wont be waiting after that for anything, I know for sure.

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

That's a great idea! I love this conversation :D I think I'll mention this type of approach! :) Thank you :D

Collapse
 
nerdy_girl profile image
Natalia

prototypes sound fair! πŸ‘