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Facebook announces SLA to fix all major bugs within 48 hours

2 pointsby msolimanabout 11 years ago

2 comments

ChuckMcMabout 11 years ago
In related news, Facebook announces a new definition of the word &#x27;major&#x27; :-)<p>Ok, that is a bit snarky. I think it is a great policy for organizations to commit to this level of response. The tension is that to execute against that policy requires a proportionate number of employees on &#x27;bug fixing&#x27; rather than &#x27;feature delivery&#x27;. Source bases grow, technical debt increases, and at some point you can&#x27;t afford to hire any feature delivery engineers, all of them have to be on &#x27;bug fixing.&#x27; Then the policy collapses. At the time I was there, Google tried to address this eventuality with &#x27;fix it&#x27; days where everyone fixed bugs (big or small) all day. They would have prizes for the person who fixed the most bugs (you could really irritate someone by fixing a half dozen really easy bugs on the day before the fix-it :-))<p>When you&#x27;re growing a company and you push&#x2F;reward &quot;Get things done&quot; or &quot;Move fast and break things.&quot; it often accumulates technical debt faster than you can purge it out of your system.
dfxm12about 11 years ago
Do they define &quot;major bugs&quot; though? And who holds them accountable and what happens if they don&#x27;t achieve this SLA?