site title

Topic: careers

Careers: Now More Awesome(r)

06-23-10 by Korneel Bouman. 11 comments

Careers has always been close to our heart, but we haven’t always been able to give it the attention we wanted to give it. No longer! We now have a dedicated development team and a dedicated sales team working tirelessly to make Careers the best place on the internet for programmers to find great jobs and for employers to find great programmers.

The sales team has been busy. As of this writing we have 351 jobs listed:

Earlier today it was 347 and by the time you read this it may well be more. Contrast that with only 74 jobs back in January!

The dev team has been busy too. We rolled out some changes yesterday:

We consolidated jobs.stackoverflow.com and careers.stackoverflow.com under one domain — http://careers.stackoverflow.com/ — gave Careers a brand new look, and added search controls to the home page so you can quickly find the jobs you’re looking for.

We added keyword search, improved location based searching and integrated the search controls into the page so you can search and scan in the same place. We also added a preview line to the listings so it’s easier to decide what jobs you’d want to look at.

And finally, we added some controls to the job detail page to make it easier to navigate between jobs.

The next step is to make it easier for employers to post and manage jobs. After that is done we’ll turn our attention over to the CV filing and searching. And after that is done we’ll think of some other great things to do, no doubt with your help — keep the feedback coming in the [careers] tag on meta.stackoverflow.com!

For careers, success equals something like [number of candidates] x [number of employers] x [number of jobs]. We’ll keep investing in Careers, by building more and better functionality for you and by selling more services to more employers, until we are synonymous with the best way to find an awesome job or a world class programmer — or sysadmin, or QA tester, or UX designer, or …

The Careers Team
careers@stackoverflow.com
Amanda, Attila, David, Korneel, Matt, Nick and Jin

Careers Success Stories

01-22-10 by Jeff Atwood. 25 comments

Now that Stack Overflow Careers is formally out of beta and fully operational, we’re getting a lot of traction with employers and making some excellent connections between companies who love great programmers, and programmers who love to code.

Here are a few recent success stories people have shared with us:

I was part of a mass layoff around Thanksgiving. That means another job search. So, I published my CV on SO Careers.

In just one week, I received a message from an employer saying that they would like to interview me. So, I scheduled an interview.

Later that week, one of my recruiters called me about the same position. Can it really take that long to get a recruiter on board? I think that this really exemplifies one of the huge benefits of SO Careers: the power is given back to the primary parties involved! Individuals have a space where they can show themselves in a much more interesting and useful way. Employers are given the power to find these people directly and on their own schedule. There is no middle-man to clog up the works.

This same employer made me an offer 30 minutes after I left the interview. I am employed again! Thanks for making this wonderful site.

— Sean Massa

And another:

I wanted to take a couple minutes to thank you all for your work on Stackoverflow careers. I filed my CV last year and got my first hit last week. The employer called me and brought me in for an interview. Now I’m facing a job offer providing a 30% raise … what sucks is I like my current job!

I just wanted you all to know your hard work and innovative ideas have impacted both my career and my bank account. The employer told me that my Stackoverflow account directly influenced their hiring decision because they could verify skills through the site. Keep up the good work!

— a programmer in Georgia

And another:

I was currently employed but was in that 25% at DevDays that “hated their job and couldn’t wait to find something better.” It wasn’t the people I worked with or the work that I did necessarily; it was the culture and the nature of being in a “corporate” job; it was so political and difficult to get the tools I needed to do my job in the best way that I could (I ended up buying my own tools such as R# and even my own keyboard and mouse).

I knew I wanted a new job, but I didn’t want to just move to another job that put me in the same situation as I was currently in. I have been searching for companies to work for in the area through all of the normal avenues (plain networking, monster, indeed, craigslist even) and it was so polluted with jobs that made it difficult to filter down.

This is where StackOverflow careers has succeeded for me; a smaller company who had great working conditions was able to find me and provide me all of the opportunities that I was looking for. I never thought that I would be able to be employed by a company that shared some mindset similarities with FogCreek (such as providing great compensation, private offices, top of the line dev machines, aeron chairs, passed the Joel test, etc!). When I interviewed, my future employer already had a sense of who I was based upon the questions and answers on my StackOverflow profile, and those gave us things to discuss during the interview (in a sense it “broke the ice”, which was awesome for me and I’m sure for my future employer as well).

Thanks to all of you for building this community that has provided me and other developers the opportunity to share our knowledge and continuously learn. And thanks to StackOverflow Careers for giving me a platform to market myself to the employers that don’t necessarily have big, recognizable names but can provide developers with what they are looking for.

— Jon Erickson

And another:

Stack Overflow Careers was directly responsible for me landing the perfect job at a local company here in Washington, DC. I am finally escaping the pain and suffering of being a government programmer.

The timing of Careers could not have been better. I published my CV the day the public beta became available and linked it with my StackOverflow account. Two days after you moved the hiring side of careers out of beta, [my new employer] contacted me. I never would have found them on my own. After lots of talking and getting to know each other,I formally accepted the job with them today and begin my new job March first.

Your product has been instrumental in my job search. From your product I received five solid leads with top tier technology companies in a three month period (including the employer beta). The other job board products I tried got me nothing – not even when I reached out to employers directly.

I will absolutely recommend your product to all of my co-workers at my old office and to anyone I know who is looking to land a top tier job in the software field.

— Ryan Michela

If you have a success story from careers, feel free to mail us at careers@stackoverflow.com, or post it in the meta thread.

But that doesn’t mean we’ve been slacking off.* We’ve been busy at work improving Stack Overflow Careers over the last few weeks, too.

One of the most common requests we got was to provide more details on who exactly the employers are, and what they’re looking for. So we’ve added the ability for any CV owner to view detailed employer search statistics. The cold, hard search data speaks for itself:

These statistics are live and updated every hour. Create your own CV and you, too, can browse the employer search stats at will.

We haven’t forgotten employers, either. Employers who subscribe to careers for longer than a week have one-click access to their entire saved search history. It appears right there on the search form, under the search button.

Give your searches names, click to repeat them — and if you subscribe for 6 months or a year, we’ll even email you new CV matches to your favorite searches as they come in.

While the number of results may seem smallish, we believe that these are all extremely high quality candidates. Yes, we’re biased, but consider typical job board results. Sure, you may get 100 responses from that job board ad, but how many of those candidates are qualified? How many of them are competent? How many of them love to program like we do?

In other words, as an employer, how much is your time worth?

Sean Massa, who just got a job through careers, sent in this followup note:

My new company loves SO Careers. They refer to it as the Gold Mine.

We realize that this is a smaller, more selective audience — but that’s the goal. We want to build a concentrated, specialized group of companies and programmers who get it. A tribe of people who love this stuff as much as we do.

Anyway, if you were holding off on careers because you weren’t sure if it would work, I don’t blame you. What we’re doing is a little unorthodox, as we explain on the about page. With the caveat that we’re never going to be the next enormo-megacorp Dice or Monster (and thank goodness), all current signs point to it working!

Remember:

  • Public CVs are always free, forever. There is a nominal fee to file your CV and make it visible to our private employer search engine.
  • It’s completely free to test our private search engine as an employer.
  • There is zero risk. If you subscribe and you’re not satisfied for any reason, within 90 days you get a full refund, period, no questions asked. We don’t want your money if you’re not amazingly happy.

If any of that sounds useful, I encourage you to check out Stack Overflow Careers.

* No more than usual, anyway

Eating Our Own Careers Dogfood

01-05-10 by Jeff Atwood. 58 comments

In software development circles, eating your own dogfood is shorthand for using your own software.

I was ecstatic the first time I used Stack Overflow to ask a programming question about the code that goes into Stack Overflow. And I was even more thrilled when I performed a programming related search that returned a useful Stack Overflow link in the results. This is “dogfooding” at its best.

Dogfood. There’s nothing more delicious. Mmm, mmm good!

Well, I’m proud to announce that we’ve reached yet another dogfooding milestone — we’re thinking of hiring another programmer to work on Stack Overflow … through Stack Overflow Careers. Naturally.

Now, this will just be a part-time gig to start. It’s difficult to expand the Stack Overflow team because we all have the unusual benefit of extensive prior work history together. Jarrod and Geoff knew what they were getting into when they signed up — we’re like a happy little dysfunctional family. It’s highly likely this will turn into a full time thing, but we need some time to get to know each other first.

Some broad guidelines:

  • Everyone on the SO team works remotely from home, and sets their own schedule (mostly). We communicate through Skype and email, so you can be anywhere in the world. Good communication skills and sweet internet connection are of course a must.
  • If you are in any way averse to the utility of an expedient hack, it is unlikely we’re the right team for you. We appreciate elegance and continual refactoring as much as the next developer, but we love results even more.
  • We will be looking for people with some kind of track record on the public internet. Doesn’t have to be an empire, but we want to see evidence of someone who … do I really have to say it? … is Smart and Gets Things Done.
  • While we are platform agnostic, the bulk of our work runs on Windows Server 2008, is written in C# 3.5 / ASP.NET MVC, and talks to SQL Server 2008. If any of that stuff is a turn-off, we’re not the team for you.

Anyway, if you’d like to work on Stack Overflow with us, and the above guidelines seem reasonable — I encourage you to list your CV at Stack Overflow Careers. Along with many other employers, that’s where we will be looking. Because as responsible software developers, we gotta eat our own dogfood.

New, Lower Careers Pricing

01-03-10 by Jeff Atwood. 23 comments

You asked.

We listened.

While it is completely free to create and publish a public CV at Stack Overflow Careers — with the vanity URL of your choice, naturally — there is a nominal fee to make your CV searchable by hiring managers through our private search interface. We call this process “filing” your CV.

Our new year’s resolution is to reduce the price of filing your CV.

sudden realization

The CV filing fee is not there to make us obscene profits (as if), but to ensure that people who file CVs are … y’know … serious. Joel explains in the Stack Overflow Careers FAQ:

When hiring managers search through CVs, they want to know that they’re looking at active, serious job applicants. If it were free to file a CV, a lot of applicants that weren’t looking for jobs, or who knew that they had no reasonable chance of getting a job, would post them, making it harder for the employers to find serious applicants.

That’s why we charge a nominal amount to file a CV. It is, however, absolutely guaranteed, and if you’re unhappy or don’t get the result you want, just let us know, and you’ll get your money back on the spot.

We believe the barrier is necessary to reduce noise. But it’s also a goal to reduce that barrier as low as we can. We want to make as many love connections as possible. That is, connections between talented software developers and companies who know the true value of these programmers they’re paying so much for. The more people and companies in the “dating pool”, the better the odds.

I love code

Thus, effective from January 1, 2010 until further notice:

  • File your CV for one year — 19
  • File your CV forever — 99
  • File your CV as a student — free

We plan to keep improving and refining the careers service throughout the year. Specifically, we’ll be exploring other options to reduce barriers to filing CVs, as well as publishing broad statistics about employer searches.

So if you haven’t created your free Stack Overflow Careers CV yet — what are you waiting for?

Careers: Now Open for Business(es)

12-02-09 by Jeff Atwood. 11 comments

I’m pleased to announce that the employer beta is now complete, and Stack Overflow Careers is now fully open for business!

dilbert-new-employee

The employers and hiring managers rates are:

  • 1 week subscription is $500
  • 1 month subscription is $1,000
  • 6 month subscription is $3,000
  • 1 year subscription is $5,000

Employers can give our search interface a spin for free, to see total match counts and get an idea of how many candidates they’ll be looking at with a subscription. As always, this whole thing is backed by our 90 day no-questions-asked total satisfaction policy. Got more questions? We’ve documented everything in the faq.

Stack Overflow Careers

Although November and December are not exactly banner months for hiring, we have a solid stable of employers already using the site — many of whom were already participating on jobs.stackoverflow.com. They’re searching through filed CVs, and actively sending messages to candidates that look promising. So keep those CVs in good shape for January!

If your company is hiring top software engineers, I encourage you to check out Stack Overflow Careers!