The CV side of careers.stackoverflow.com has been reasonably complete, ever since we added free public CVs.
Well, I’m proud to announce that we’ve begun serious beta testing of the other half of the equation — the part of careers.stackoverflow.com for employers and hiring managers.
We’ve been trickling in “friends of Stack Overflow” who happen to be employers (including Joel) over the last week and a half. If you’re familiar with our sloppyiterative development style, here’s what we like to do:
- build out some more features
- let a few people experience those features
- gather detailed feedback
GOTO 1
This way we know whether we’re on track, and how far we have to go — while (hopefully) avoiding building The Wrong Thing.
We’re pretty deep into this cycle now, so I have reasonable confidence that what we’ve built for employers doesn’t suck too much. The basic process is not complicated: hiring managers have a flexible ajax-y search form, and the ability to save and email candidates they’re interested in.
While the primary form of communication in the system is email, we realize email is a fallible system, so we also have web-based notifications alongside email. You may also notice a new “messages” tab in the careers UI. Here, you can view the status of any pending communication between hiring managers and candidates from either side.
We’ve also turned on many of the statistics in the system, like how many searches have been performed, how many times your CV has been viewed by the public (if published) and potential employers (if filed), and so forth. We plan to keep a ridiculous number of live stats, so you can see how well that CV filing fee is actively working for you (or not).
I should also point out that the $29 / 3 years special introductory filing rate for your CV is conclusively over. That was our way of thanking the truly early adopters, who went out of their way to trust in this careers thing we’re doing, even before it was fully built. We won’t let you down! That said, we’re still sort of in the beginning, as you can see from the employer beta, so we’ve extended a new introductory CV filing rate until the end of 2009:
$29 for 1 year
Fair warning, the price absolutely will go up in 2010. So if you think you might need to file your CV — that is, make it searchable by hiring managers — any time in the next year, consider jumping on this offer before January 1.
(as a reminder: as always, publishing a public CV on careers.stackoverflow.com is and always will be totally 100% free, forever! There’s a modest filing fee only for those who wish to be searchable by hiring managers.)
To everyone who has signed up for careers, thank you. We won’t let you down. Our goal is to take your job situation from this …
… to this!
Well, metaphorically speaking.
Keep an eye on those email boxes, messages tabs, and stats over the next two weeks. We’re going to do everything we can to make the magic happen. If you’d like to be a part of that magic, file your CV at Stack Overflow Careers.
Oh, and if you happen to have awesome programming jobs that are worthy of the Stack Overflow Careers community — email us at careers@stackoverflow.com and we’ll see what we can do.
We unveiled a milestone in Stack Overflow Careers at DevDays London earlier today.
We had originally envisioned careers as a completely private subscription service, but we belatedly realized that was kind of a mistake, and the source of much confusion. One common bit of feedback we got from users was the cognitive dissonance between Stack Overflow, which is free and public by default, and Stack Overflow Careers, which was private and subscription only by default. We agree. That’s why we’ve now added a free, public side to careers.stackoverflow.com:
| Publish CV | free, public CVs for any working programmer who wants one, at the URL of their choice. |
| File CV | subscribe for a nominal fee, and make your private CV visible to and searchable by hiring managers |
Public CVs can be made visible, with full privacy controls, at the custom URL of your choice. Like so:

You can view a sample public CV at http://careers.stackoverflow.com/community to get an idea of what public CVs look like. Of course you can associate and link your Trilogy accounts to your public CV as well.
Obviously, each URL has to be unique, so they are provided on a first-come, first-served basis. If you want a specific http://careers.stackoverflow.com/foo type URL for your public CV, sign up with Careers now and reserve your desired URL on the Publish CV tab.
But Public CVs isn’t all. This careers update also has:
- re-ordering of experience and education entries to taste
- support for full Markdown formatting in all free text CV fields
- automatic blocking of any of your previous employers from finding you in searches (by company name)
- optional free, public CVs with the URL of your choice, with detailed privacy control
- lots of other little
bug fixeslittle new improvements!
Creating and publishing your CV are, and will always be, completely free. But filing to make your CV visible and searchable by hiring managers will still involve a nominal fee. The introductory filing rate of $29 for 3 years runs until November 9th. If you think you’ll ever be looking for a job in the next three years, I encourage you to take advantage of this faaaaaaaabulous introductory rate. After November 9th, it will go away!
We’re serious about creating connections between smart developers and companies who appreciate smart developers. If you have any questions or feedback, let us know on meta.stackoverflow.com in the careers tag. We’re always listening. Our #1 goal is to actively improve careers in every way we can over the next few months.
When we integrated jobs.stackoverflow.com, I dropped a little hint:
That said, this is just a start on the careers front. We have some more innovative things we are working on in this area that we hope to roll out in the next 6 to 8 weeks. Like, say, wouldn’t it be cool if your CV listed the stuff programmers really care about, such as your first computer …
Joel just announced what we’ve been working on for the last 6-8 weeks at Boston DevDays:
careers.stackoverflow.com is intended as a private complement to the public profiles at stackoverflow.com.
Sam Saffron correctly identified our key goals in a speculative meta post:
I know what you’re thinking, there is already the woeful non-international, poorly targeted, tiny note on every page and a check box on your profile that does nothing.
Nonetheless, employers are willing to pay lots of money to find good people, and there is a pool of over 100K developers on stack overflow with a living, breathing resume. Surely we could do better than having a couple of non-relevant links on every page.
- Target job ads at the location the user is from. I, for one, am not really interested in relocating my life to Albuquerque at the moment.
- Create a new entity that does jobs better, partner with local job agencies.
- Collect more information from the end users. Eg. Would you be willing to move? Would you be willing to work from home? Looking for contract or full time? Etc …
We believe that every professional programmer should have a job they love, and current sites like Monster, DICE, craigslist, and so forth do a woefully inadequate job of matching professional programmers with the type of employers who understand the true value of programmers who hit the high notes.
So, then, our goals are twofold:
- Avoid the keyword-spam-free-resume ghetto, and build a community of top-notch programmers who are serious about finding a great job. Yes, that means there is a nominal fee to file your CV.
- Allow optional, but deep, integration of your public Stack Overflow profile with your private CV. So instead of being a mere list of keywords and answers to questions, you become a living, breathing track record of what kind of programmer you are.
In short, we’re trying to change the rules of the game.
I encourage you to scan through the about page and the faq and share your thoughts in the comments.
Will it work? We don’t know. But, for what it’s worth, we honestly want to connect passionate programmers with companies who appreciate, respect, and — most of all — love passionate programmers.
Go ahead. Try careers.stackoverflow.com out. It’s totally free to get started and see how everything works, and our faaaaaaaaaaaaaaabulous introductory offer of $29 for 3 years of filing is good until November 9th.
As usual, if it works and it’s awesome, the Stack Overflow team takes full credit. And if it sucks, well, I told you this was all Joel’s idea!





