
Organized chaos gets the job done
When software developer JosĂ© Rodrigues started working with his Dutch client, it was a culture shock for him. He had previous experience in the Netherlands: as an exchange student, heâd studied for a year in Groningen. Yet, the high-tech work culture was hard for him to get used to. âItâs a bit like organized chaos. You need to learn how to trust the process.â
Rodrigues started his career as a physicist, graduating from the University of Coimbra in Portugal. He quickly moved into software engineering, where he ended up at ICT Strypes. âIâm currently working on the drivers for a water cabinet thatâs responsible for cooling,â he says. âMy job is writing software and testing it.â
ICT Strypes Portugal is a software development company with roots in the Netherlands. Today, itâs based in the South European country, with facilities in Lisbon and Porto. The company has experienced that Dutch and Portuguese work cultures can be quite different. Thatâs why it decided to host a one-day culture training in Porto, âHow to be successful in the Dutch high-tech work cultureâ by High Tech Institute.
Rodrigues was one of the participants. âThere were two reasons to take it,â he says. âOne was to better communicate with our Dutch contacts. The other was to learn from the Dutch high-tech ecosystem and see which of their lessons we can also apply here in Portugal.â
Natural selection
The training zoomed in on a specific semicon equipment company and their unique way of doing things. âEven inside the Netherlands, they have a very atypical culture,â notes Rodrigues. âMy first impression was: this is chaos. It was organized chaos, but still chaos. When I first had to work with them, it felt quite confusing. But after a while, you realize that itâs efficient in its own way and that they get the job done.â
âThe Dutch are in general very punctual and direct,â Rodrigues continues. âOur customer, on the other hand, is more chaotic than the average Dutch company. Itâs a type of natural selection. They overcame a lot of challenges and converged on this way of working. And it really works.â
The course was taught by Jaco Friedrich, one of High Tech Instituteâs trainers, who has decades of experience in the Dutch corporate tech culture. He came to Porto to teach the course to the ICT Strypes engineers.
âIt was much more engaging than I initially expected,â Rodrigues recalls. âOften, these kinds of courses tend to get a bit dense, particularly by the end. Thereâs a trainer with a Powerpoint spewing facts all day long. This one wasnât anything like that. There were a lot of practical examples. We also engaged with the trainer, and with each other. For example, we did simulations of real-life social situations.â

Giving feedback
Because of the course, Rodrigues and his colleagues learned how to accomplish certain tasks more efficiently. One of the most important of those was the code review. In the past, there was some friction here between the Netherlands and Portugal. After the course, however, the process was reviewed and improved.
The course also improved the professional skills of the participants and provided solutions to common workplace problems. âOne of the things I learned myself was how to push an idea forward,â observes Rodrigues. âEngineers sometimes tend to be very perfectionist. We want our product to be 100 percent perfect. This, however, sometimes delays a project and causes it to stall. For the client, a 90 percent perfect product that can be delivered earlier is at times better than a 100 percent perfect one thatâs delivered too late. Making that switch in mindset was an important outcome of the course.â
Giving feedback, often a touchy subject for engineers, has equally improved since the course. âSometimes, it was hard giving feedback without appearing judgmental,â Rodrigues notes. âTechnical people tend to be sensitive about the quality of their work. The course taught us how to successfully communicate feedback without hurting or making the other person angry. Thatâs something I now use very regularly.â
Criticism is one of the areas in which Dutch and Portuguese people differ heavily. Dutch professionals tend to be much more direct than their Portuguese counterparts. âIf youâre too direct with them, the average Portuguese person will get offended,â Rodrigues says. âThat doesnât happen very often with a Dutch person. That, of course, doesnât mean that Dutch people have bad intentions; itâs just part of their culture. A Portuguese professional, however, will take that level of directness quite hard. Thatâs another thing the course discussed and taught us to handle better.â
For Rodrigues, this training is a must-have for non-Dutch people working with high-tech companies in the Netherlands. âMy first impression was overwhelmingâ, he admits. âOver time, I learned to see that it actually made sense and that their organization actually works very well. But if youâre not used to this, it can be a bit of a culture shock. If Iâd taken this course earlier in my career, I would have understood my Dutch colleagues from day one.â
This article was written in close collaboration with High Tech Institute. Top image credit: Nuno Vasco/NVStudio