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Steve, If you mean "just a person who codes" and nothing else, I'd be inclined to let it pass. But are you talking about programmer/analysts and business systems analysts? In my view, technical skills are important, but the business knowledge is just as, if not more, important. Would you trust "a programmer with no business experience" program a MRP generation? Inventory control? GL/AP/AR? Trucking route calculator? Trailer volume-fitting algorithms? Unless very detailed flowcharts and specs are given to him (or her), that programmer with no business experience will flounder. Why is as important as what and how. Not only programmers, but I think every person in IT must have some business knowledge to help the company succeed. IT has evolved out of its "ivory tower" and is an integral component of many companies. An IT department that doesn't know what the business is doing, or where it should be heading, is doomed. Loyd Goodbar Senior programmer/analyst BorgWarner E/TS Water Valley 662-473-5713 -----Original Message----- From: Raby, Steve (GE Advanced Materials, consultant) [mailto:steve.raby@xxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, March 01, 2005 08:02 To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion Subject: RE: Time to get serious <snip> Ok you will teach the old fogies (like me:-)) but why is it that so many people seem to think that a programmer MUST have relevant business experience? I do not think that it is necessarily the case. </snip>
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