DocumentCode
2008667
Title
An initial investigation of software practitioners´ motivation
Author
Sharp, Helen ; Hall, Tracy
Author_Institution
Centre for Comput. Res., Open Univ., Milton Keynes
fYear
2009
fDate
17-17 May 2009
Firstpage
84
Lastpage
91
Abstract
Motivation is one of the most frequently cited causes of software development project failure, reportedly impacting on project productivity, software quality and the overall success of the project. Much of the previous research into software engineers´ motivation cites the job itself as the main motivator, yet little research has focused on why software engineers stay in the profession. This paper reports on an empirical investigation with experienced software practitioners which focuses on this issue and compares our findings with existing work. The results show that aspects of dasiapeoplepsila are important in job satisfaction and project choice, while a practitioner´s standing in the community is a key influence on whether or not he/she will stay in software engineering; aspects of dasiacreativitypsila are mentioned most often as making software development worthwhile. When asked to identify three key elements of motivation, aspects of dasiapeoplepsila were mentioned the most often.
Keywords
software quality; project productivity; software development project failure; software engineering; software practitioner motivation; software quality; Computer industry; Information systems; Mathematics; Open source software; Problem-solving; Productivity; Programming; Software engineering; Software quality; Team working;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Cooperative and Human Aspects on Software Engineering, 2009. CHASE '09. ICSE Workshop on
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3712-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CHASE.2009.5071418
Filename
5071418
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