this post was submitted on 19 Aug 2023
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For reference (as per Wikipedia):

Any organization that designs a system (defined broadly) will produce a design whose structure is a copy of the organization's communication structure.

— Melvin E. Conway

Imagine interpreting that as advice on how you should try to design things, lol.

Tbf, I think most of the post is just typical LinkedIn fluff, but I didn't want to take the poor fellow out of context.

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[–] thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca 19 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Totally fair, and I'm actually pretty happy to see someone steelman the LinkedIn guy's point. Surprisingly thoughtful discussion here for a meme sub, lol.

I still think most of his post is pretty vapid ("org structure and technology should both support business goals," yeah duh), but the content isn't really objectionable... He's just kind of... not saying much, I think. That's what I meant by "LinkedIn fluff."

What makes me smirk is invoking (and IMO, misunderstanding) Conway's Law, although that was more an issue with the comic than the post (he talks about "Conway's Law" directly in the comments, but I didn't post those).

The takeaway from Conway's Law isn't supposed to be "when you're deciding how to architect a software system, make sure to conform to the org structure." It's that the system structure will tend to mimic the communication structure (and possibly vice-versa), which may be good or bad, and you need to manage that tendency.

It's certainly not "managers are the real software architects," lol.

Thanks for your perspective. I wonder what your opinion of the comic part is?

[–] NotAnonymousAtAll@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Nowhere in that text does it say "managers are the real software architects". What it does say is "what managers do affects software architecture". Sure you can extrapolate that to delusions of grandeur, but if you take into account the explicit call for collaboration it is much more likely what was meant is more along the lines of "we can mess things up if we ignore the architecture, so let's talk to the real software architects before making org decisions".

About the comic: That one does have the line "management designs software architecture", much closer to the negative interpretation; but that too can be interpreted in a more positive way as "... and we are not good at that, so let's make sure to bring in the people who are good at it at important points".

[–] Steeve@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

if you take into account the explicit call for collaboration it is much more likely what was meant is more along the lines of "we can mess things up if we ignore the architecture, so let's talk to the real software architects before making org decisions

That's an extrapolation itself and I think a much less likely intention. The post takes an obvious concept (alignment) and somehow pretentiously comes to the conclusion that managers are actually system architects while downplaying the role of technical contributors, you know, the ones actually designing the systems. It takes two to "harmonize", so if that's what you bring to the table, the technical components are doing that and their actual job. This is just a dude on LinkedIn jerking himself off.

The comic is very accurate though, at least the part where the manager is lounging with his feet up on his desk doing dick all thinking about how he can take credit for someone else's job.

[–] thanks_shakey_snake@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

Nowhere in that text does it say “managers are the real software architects”. What it does say is “what managers do affects software architecture”.

Totally 👍I'd take it even a step further to say that he doesn't even mention managers (or any other role) in the text-- It's the comic that states that, as you say. It's debatable to what extent the comic and the text should be read as one unit, but I think it's fair to contextualize them together.

If you're right about the intent-- i.e. to say "let's make sure to bring in the people who are good at architecture--" then I think at best, it's poorly articulated. It'd an odd move to post a comic that elevates his role and then not mention those people at all, right? Instead, he makes vague calls to "collaborate" and "align," which many people hear as "schedule meetings and do manager stuff," and then imply that that's how software gets architected, because... Conway's Law?

I still think it's nice of you to try to interpret it charitably, though. I imagine if we shared this thread with this manager, he probably wouldn't double down on how, no, really, Management are the real architects! He'd more likely pivot to echo much of what you've said, perhaps pretending that that was what he was saying all along.

Then we'd be free to argue about Conway's Law for the rest of the thread.