Professional game makers care very much about how Unity operates as a business these days.

  • soulsource@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 months ago

    Oh, that just happened. We didn’t have established processes for promotions for a very long time. The company was a tiny startup when I joined (quite literally in the cellar of the company founder’s place), with a really flat hierarchy and no distinction in seniority.

    At the point when the company started to set up a formal process for promotions, I had already been there for so long, that I was considered one of the most experienced people, and that’s how I ended up being filed under “senior coders” in the employee list basically since that category existed… It also was a bit weird, as that happened to coincide with all the COVID lockdown chaos, and I never had a formal promotion talk, just an email with an amandment to my contract, which I didn’t even read too carefully, so I didn’t realize at first that this was not just the yearly pay increase 😉.

    Oh, and believe me, the impostor syndrome is strong with me. I would not have promoted me to that role.

    • SatouKazuma@programming.dev
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      2 months ago

      I’m in a megafirm you’ve probably heard of, but I’ve been in this role for my third and fourth YoE, so I’m wondering how long it should take me to get to mid-level/senior.

      • Mirror Giraffe@piefed.social
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        1 month ago

        I’m a tech lead for a software company and it’s all very individual and I never judge by how long they have been in the role.

        What I’m mainly looking for is how well you

        1. Work in a team and help others.
        2. Understand our stack.
        3. Learn new things. In that order.

        Of course sometimes someone can be so exceptional at something and fill a nice role that makes me overlook or reorder that list.