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nbm | 4 years ago

Since you mention a big tech company, what you’ll probably find is that there are people that care about these things around you, and they’re probably doing what they can and could do with support - not necessarily to do work, but also just moral support. (I like to pretend I’m one of those people in the quality space in my area in my big tech company…)

As others mention, be careful trying to change the world (and especially saying bad things about what you see) before you grow your credibility. But ask a few questions in team meetings (or, at something like FB, in workplace groups) about what test or staging or related infrastructure is available as part of ramping up, and that might get people that care to notice you’re a potential ally.

There’s even the (admittedly probably very) small chance that that the team wants to improve here, and doesn’t know how/didn’t have the resources to do better before - either way, you’ll learn more without alienating anyone.

Big tech companies also often offer mobility and culture variety, so keep your eye out for teams that align with what you care about. Learn what they do and how they got started at least - or possibly move there.

(If you’re at FB, feel free to reach out to me - same account name.)

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