The bad news is that I've never heard of a workplace that's managed to change that culture once it's set in. The good news is that there are plenty of places to work which don't have that nonsense - which you can work in, if you can find them; which, to be fair, is pretty difficult. That said, it's worth the effort.
That's one of the questions I ask potential employers - "Say I'd like to make a small change to the workflow, in order to meet an oversight requirement - for example, on a project I'm engineering - how would I go about doing so using your work tracking system? How many people would I need approval from to do so? Let's assume the effect is internal to my project and would require no other team to change how they work. Is that possible?"
The answer usually says a lot more about the prospective employer than any technical questions about their code-bases do - and those are generally easy to suss out with a quick inspection, and SCM log perusal, anyway.
Yeah.
The bad news is that I've never heard of a workplace that's managed to change that culture once it's set in. The good news is that there are plenty of places to work which don't have that nonsense - which you can work in, if you can find them; which, to be fair, is pretty difficult. That said, it's worth the effort.
That's one of the questions I ask potential employers - "Say I'd like to make a small change to the workflow, in order to meet an oversight requirement - for example, on a project I'm engineering - how would I go about doing so using your work tracking system? How many people would I need approval from to do so? Let's assume the effect is internal to my project and would require no other team to change how they work. Is that possible?"
The answer usually says a lot more about the prospective employer than any technical questions about their code-bases do - and those are generally easy to suss out with a quick inspection, and SCM log perusal, anyway.