Work/Life Balance For Passionate Developers
Presented by Joshua Warren
Put That Laptop Down And Get Some Sleep!
PHP DeveloperWorking with PHP on the web
since 1999
Founder & CEOFounded Creatuity in 2008
PHP Development Firm
Focus on the Magento platform
I was inspired, in large part, by never wanting to work in a traditional office thanks to the movie
‘Office Space’.
Frequent Conference Presenter
Occasional Open Source Contributor
Over-Tweeter
Hardware Hacker
Avid Sci-Fi Reader
Aspiring Author
What Work/Life Balance Looks Like To Me
Work/Life Balance Looks Different to Everyone
Work Looks DifferentLife Looks Different
Apply These Principles to Your Unique Work/Life Situation
JoshuaWarren.com
@JoshuaSWarren
IMPORTANT!
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What’s That?
Work/Life Balance
–Wikipedia
A concept including proper prioritizing between "work" and "lifestyle"
–Wikipedia
“Lifestyle” includes health, pleasure, leisure, family & spiritual development/
meditation
Work/Life Balance
Used to be simple
Work 8 hours making widgets, then go home
The widgets didn’t follow you home
Work/Life Balance Today
Work 8+ hours
Spend an hour driving home
Check your work email on your smartphone
Finish up “one last bit” of work after dinner
Think of when you were packing to attend Full Stack Toronto
We have a limited amount of room and have to choose carefully what we pack.
If we aren’t mindful of what we pack - others will make those decisions for us.
Most of us are trying to pack entirely too much - we’re spending too much of our life focused on work.
–Every Overworked Developer
That’s OK, though, because I love what I do!
Work/Life Integration
“If people enjoy what they do, there’s no need to draw strict lines.” —Fortune Magazine
Not a bad concept, but…
Work/Life Integration
Work/Life Integration, especially when abused by employers, destroys personal boundaries
Healthy personal boundaries are critical to self-worth, happiness & fulfillment
The best attempts at work/life integration use technology to allow employees to alter their work to
better accommodate their personal life.
The worst attempts at work/life integration use technology and peer pressure to take advantage of
passionate, driven employees.
Cui Bono
Evaluate a company’s work/life initiatives by asking a simple question - cui bono - “to whose benefit?”
Or: It’s about to get real…
The Personal Case For Work/Life Balance
#fstoconf15
The average American in their mid-30’s has 2,000 Saturdays left in their life. Don’t
waste them.
2,000 sounds like a lot - but think about how fast each weekend disappears.
Also, that assumes you reach the average.
Every year, our community loses friends and colleagues well before their time
Work is important, but life is precious, and it’s entirely too short.
Inspired by Merlin Mann’s post How Many Saturdays Do You Get and the followup discussion on his podcast,
Back to Work
Merlin’s calculation was that he had only about 300 Saturdays left that his young daughter would want to spend
with him.
Importance of Personal Time
Develop and maintain healthy relationships
Personal growth & development
Happiness & fulfillment
Importance of Personal Time
Improve your health
Lower stress levels
Or: A slightly less depressing, more business-y segment
The Business Case for Work/Life Balance
#fstoconf15
Tech executives - you’re not running a factory. Stop treating your employees like factory
workers.
Studies have linked personal downtime to increases in creativity, memory, learning and problem solving.
Hiring millennials? 40% of them will leave if you don’t have a good work/life balance
policy. — Washington Post
In other words - do you want high performing employees who are creative, solve problems and
help your business grow?
Give your employees downtime!
Or: Stop Working Your Employees To Death
Implement Work/Life Balance at Work
#fstoconf15
Work/life balance is not a perk. It’s an attitude of respect for each employee’s life and need for rest.
Healthy work/life balance requires a culture where employees feel safe disconnecting from work.
Create clear boundaries and expectations between working and non-working times.
Flexible hours and working from home are great, but create a clear boundary that signals to manager
and employee when the employee is working.
Flexible hours and remote work are not an excuse or justification for overworking employees.
As an employee - ask for these boundaries if you’re not receiving them.
As a manager - make sure to respect your employee’s boundaries - and your own. Lead by
example.
Popular Options
Telecommuting
20+ PTO days
Compressed workweek
Flexible schedules
These options are great, but implemented on their own without a cultural change, they are often
underutilized.
For example - instead of “flexible schedules”, set “core hours”.
Corporate employees of Darden Restaurants have core hours from 9:00AM - 3:30PM
Old culture: all employees must be in the same office at the same time, or they aren’t getting work
done
New culture: it’s important for employees to be able to collaborate, but their productivity won’t suffer if they don’t have the exact same hours.
Or: Rediscover Those People and/or Pets Living In Your Home
Implement Work/Life Balance at Home
Set boundaries.
Determine what you and your family are comfortable with, and stick to it.
For some people, that means work stays at work.
For others, it means getting that last hour of work in after the kids have gone to bed.
Experiment with small changes.
I banned laptops from my bedroom and discovered that one change greatly improved my sleep.
I tried Flux - https://justgetflux.com/
I even wore these $6 glasses:
For me - it wasn’t just the impact of staring at a bright screen. Using a laptop in bed prevented me
from relaxing my mind.
#fstoconf15
Know yourself. Take time to set priorities to help you guide your own personal balance between
work and life.
Track all of your time for a week - including time spent at home.
Try Using the Print-At-Home Emergent Task Timer
Does your time spent at home match up with your priorities? If not, rearrange until it does.
Treat your personal time the same way you treat your work time.
Would you walk out of a meeting at work for a minor issue at home?
Then don’t give up your personal time for a minor issue at work!
Focus on your health
Get better sleep - FitBit
Improve your nutrition - MyFitnessPal
Get some sort of exercise - FitBit + MyFitnessPal
Even minor improvements to your health will have a noticeable impact on your work/life balance and
your enjoyment of life
Or: gl hf
Work/Life Balance For Remote Workers
Remote workers tend to have the very best or very worst work/life balance.
Again - it all comes down to boundaries.
Set clear boundaries with everyone involved - both your family and your coworkers.
Ensure your family respects your work time - establish a clear signal when you are ‘at work’.
Ensure your work respects your family time - establish clear rules and expectations of when you
will and won’t be reachable.
Find a support group - A coffee shop, a coworking space, a makerspace.
You need an in-person outlet for work-related stress other than your family.
Or: gl hf dd
Work/Life Balance For Passionate Developers
Example: You’re a full-time PHP developer who spends all day working with a custom app in Laravel
Coming home and working on a personal project in Laravel - is it work?
Personal projects closely related to what you do at work aren’t necessarily bad.
The key is balance.
Don’t spend all of your personal time on a project that closely mirrors what you do at work.
Split your personal time between projects similar to your work and completely unrelated projects.
Start small - if you usually work with Symfony at work, learn Laravel at home.
Then, find hobbies in unrelated areas.
Spending your downtime learning a new hobby or skill will boost your creativity.
If you’re a software developer, buy an Arduino and start tinkering with circuits.
Combine your interests and your work with new hobbies as well.
For example - I enjoy speaking with developers and trying new beers.
I use every trip I take - for work or pleasure - to connect with local user groups and get their
recommendation for a good local beer.
Work/life balance is hard. Especially for those of us passionate about our work.
It’s an important topic, and important to get it right - those 2,000 Saturdays will pass by in a blink.
Set aside time for yourself, for your family and for downtime.
Stop and think about how you’re spending your time, and what boundaries you have in place.
#fstoconf15
Define one boundary between your work and your life and starting Monday,
respect that boundary.
After a week, try the Emergent Task Timer and see if your reality matches up with your priorities and
boundaries.
Keep In Touch!
lanyrd.com/sdhttz
@JoshuaSWarren
JoshuaWarren.com