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ICSE 2020
Wed 24 June - Thu 16 July 2020
Wed 8 Jul 2020 15:00 - 15:08 at Baekje - A7-Human Aspects 1 Chair(s): Alexander Serebrenik

Improving developer job satisfaction and productivity have been recognized as critical goals by many software companies and are a point of interest in recent company-led surveys. More satisfied developers would allow companies to attract and retain talent, while more productive developers could help reduce costs, increase profits, and improve product quality. Retaining talent is especially important because high turnover introduces challenges with software quality when important knowledge is lost. Productivity is also impacted as new developers have to learn the project landscape and existing developers have to spend time training them.

The research we presented in the paper aimed to understand and explain the relationship between job satisfaction and perceived productivity for software engineers. Our investigation was informed by seminal work in organizational psychology, where job satisfaction is widely accepted to be positively correlated with work performance. We built on this work to investigate which factors influence the relationship between developer satisfaction and perceived productivity in software engineering.

To develop our theory, we conducted a study in a large software company. The first author spent several months at the company observing and learning how different organizations within this company aimed to understand and measure developers’ productivity and their job satisfaction. The existing efforts in this company revealed that job and engineering tool satisfaction were often used as proxies for perceived productivity. However, not enough was known on how much satisfaction and productivity are related and which other work factors may influence job satisfaction and perceived productivity. Through our empirical investigation we identified the social and technical factors that impact job satisfaction and perceived productivity for software engineers, as well as the perceived importance of these factors. Furthermore, we uncovered the challenges developers face and their impact. Finally, we provided evidence of how the social and technical factors and work context impact the relationship between job satisfaction and perceived productivity, a relationship that was previously assumed or underexplored.

The paper contributes a theory that describes how overall job satisfaction and perceived productivity are related and articulates how factors and challenges may impact these constructs for particular developers and specific work contexts. Our theory suggests that improving one without paying attention to the other may be detrimental, and that many different social and technical factors may need to be addressed.

Wed 8 Jul

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15:00 - 16:00
A7-Human Aspects 1Technical Papers / Journal First / New Ideas and Emerging Results at Baekje
Chair(s): Alexander Serebrenik Eindhoven University of Technology
15:00
8m
Talk
Towards a theory of software developer job satisfaction and perceived productivityJ1
Journal First
Margaret-Anne Storey University of Victoria, Thomas Zimmermann Microsoft Research, Christian Bird Microsoft Research, Jacek Czerwonka Developer Services, Microsoft, Brendan Murphy Microsoft Research, Eirini Kalliamvakou University of Victoria
Pre-print Media Attached
15:08
6m
Talk
Eye of the Mind: Image Processing for Social CodingNIER
New Ideas and Emerging Results
Maleknaz Nayebi York University
Pre-print
15:14
12m
Talk
How Software Practitioners Use Informal Local Meetups to Share Software Engineering KnowledgeTechnical
Technical Papers
Claire Ingram University of York, Anders Drachen University of York
15:26
12m
Talk
Explaining Pair Programming Session Dynamics from Knowledge GapsTechnical
Technical Papers
Franz Zieris Freie Universität Berlin, Lutz Prechelt Freie Universität Berlin
DOI Pre-print Media Attached
15:38
6m
Talk
Better Code, Better Sharing: On the Need of Analyzing Jupyter NotebooksNIER
New Ideas and Emerging Results
Jiawei Wang Monash University, Li Li Monash University, Australia, Andreas Zeller CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security
Pre-print
15:44
6m
Talk
Stress and Burnout in Open Source: Toward Finding, Understanding, and Mitigating Unhealthy InteractionsNIER
New Ideas and Emerging Results
Naveen Raman University of Maryland, College Park, Minxuan Cao Carnegie Mellon University, Yulia Tsvetkov Carnegie Mellon University, Christian Kästner Carnegie Mellon University, Bogdan Vasilescu Carnegie Mellon University
Pre-print
15:50
8m
Talk
Enabling Good Work Habits in Software Developers through Reflective Goal-SettingJ1
Journal First
André N. Meyer University of Zurich, Gail Murphy University of British Columbia, Thomas Zimmermann Microsoft Research, Thomas Fritz University of Zurich
Pre-print Media Attached