Here where I work I am trying to get the MVC framework accepted as the framework to use moving forward.
The boss is quite keen to move forward but thinks it’s a huge risk to take given I’m the only one that knows the framework.
I’ve sent multiple emails out about training sessions, and put my hand up in many a meeting for again training sessions but no matter how many times I do it I can’t seem to get a single one of these people fired up.
I’ve given small demos and they all ooohh and ahhh at it but when it comes time to actually [learn] something, no one bothers to get on board.
Has anyone encountered the same sort of developer malaise and managed to overcome it?
The best way to get people interested in a new technology / methodology or whatever it may be, is to show them advantages. They don’t need to be tangible – just enough that they realise.
You need to have a few things to be able to convince people of a point:
Developers are normally a tricky bunch and they like their technology stack, whatever it may be. Prehistoric or shiny-and-new, whatever: it’s their current Awesomeness.
As to how you can go about presenting this information in a format that would engage your peers is a completely different matter. Whatever – it needs to be short and sweet and leave them interested to some degree. You should find that possible to do with just a 5 minute wax-lyrical.
If you manage to mention all this and sell it well – and still your peers don’t give a flying monkey about MVC (to at least the degree of curiosity), then your peers may not be “Developers”, but merely “people with a day job developing”, who just do what they need to and go home. (Nothing necessarily bad about this category of developer – but you’ll rarely get them fired up about a new-and-shiny).