Site icon WebDevStudios

WebDevStudios Day in the Life of a Backend Engineer

Dave Romsey

Job Title: Backend Engineer

Years at WebDevStudios: 2.25

Dave Romsey, Backend Engineer

I’ve always been a big fan of WebDevStudios (WDS). I can’t remember precisely what drew me in, but WDS always seemed to make good choices about WordPress development practices.

When trying to stay on top of WordPress happenings, something related to WDS would always be part of the conversation, whether it was wd_s, CMB2, the podcasts, or informative blog posts. I adopted a “what would WDS do?” approach to problem solving, which yielded great results. Oh yeah, WDS’ 100% remote thing greatly appealed to me too.

Years later, after long commutes to do agency work, then dabbling in freelance, an opportunity to work for WDS presented itself. I applied, and went through a paid engineering trial, which re-enforced my opinion that that these folks were _doing_it_right().

I passed the trial, which was a great and challenging experience in and of itself, and officially became a Backend Engineer (BEE) at WebDevStudios.

A Typical Day

A typical day involves thinking about solutions and creating tickets, writing/testing/reviewing/discussing/documenting/and deploying code, as well as some other odds and ends sprinkled in. That’s probably not much of a surprise to anyone. I’ll go over things in a little more detail below.

First Things First: Getting Ramped Up for the Day

Each day, I go through a little routine to get myself set up for the day’s tasks. The process looks something like this:

The Bulk of the Day

It’s no surprise that most of my day as a backend engineer is spent writing code. Everything we work on is tied to a specific ticket in Jira, which is great.

Work on Tickets
Odds and Ends
Regularly Scheduled Meetings and Scrums

There are a variety of regularly scheduled scrums that we attend over Zoom. Here’s a breakdown:

Maintaining a Balance

Another thing I like about working at WDS is the balance of time spent on meetings vs coding. I rarely ever feel like I’m stuck in meetings all day or that I’ve been staring at code all day and haven’t talked to anyone. I don’t take this for granted.

Wrapping the Day Up
Wrap it up BEE!

EOD updates: Each day, engineers will post an end-of-day update to the project channels that they are assigned to, outlining what they did that day for each ticket. This gives everybody a birds eye view of what’s going on, and helps to prime the pumps for the following day’s standup.

Before signing out of Slack, I try to send out any remaining tacos I have for the day.

Me Time

Work/life balance is great at WDS. Once I get my time in for the day, I know that I can switch over to my personal life. This helps me to be the best backend engineer I can be.

I’m always up to something, though it changes frequently. Here are some activities and hobbies that are currently or routinely part of my day:

That’s about it. Thank you for reading about how I spend my day at WebDevStudios! We’re hiring backend engineers right now. Take a look at the job description and apply today.

Exit mobile version