Have you ever used your reputation (points) outside of this website, say to get a job or something? Or more generally, what are reputation points to you?
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Oct 10 '09 at 23:41
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I've always thought of my reputation points on this site as a shameful secret I must conceal from my employers. Answering questions here is what I do when I'm trying to avoid work! |
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I told them I am Jon Skeet from Stack Overflow and they hired me right away. Schweet!! |
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If I were an employer and an interviewee was boasting about their reputation I'd look at what questions were asked and what answers were given. For example, "How is babby formed (in PHP)?" would not score well for a PHP guru. Additionally answering of "just google it, dude" may show things about ability to work within a team. Having said that I think there should be no fear of asking questions, no matter how stupid. If I were an employee I guess I would see a lot of questions asked as a desire to improve or to understand. |
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As soon as I reach 1.000.000 points I'll fire Jeff and Joel and dominate SO! |
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I suspect that rep points alone aren't significant, but I can imagine that someone wanting to provide evidence to Microsoft of why they (or anyone else) should be an MVP could certainly point at their answers on Stack Overflow. The important thing is the details of how the reputation has been gained, not the number. Having said that, I thoroughly enjoy the element of competition that reputation brings to the party. I'm a competitive person, and although the number is in many ways meaningless, it's fun to compete with it. (That's also why I've suggested a monthly league, to even the playing field on a regular basis.) |
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I enjoy having a mid-sized rep so I can edit questions and answers to make them better/more complete. I do more editing nowadays than actual answering or asking. I did mention at my last interview that Stack Overflow is something I do in my free time. It was a nice conversation piece for the interview and showed that I am interested in programming outside of work too. |
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Can you have too much rep though? |
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Being new, and not having been on a job search lately, my personal answer is "no". However, in order to keep my brain engaged and myself involved in more than just my daily work, I've made it a goal to give one useful answer here a day. I've found that teaching, no matter how formal or informal, clarifies my thoughts and helps me learn. So, no, I don't think anybody is going to give me a job based on my SO reputation, but it certainly helps me learn more about what's going on and keeps my mind focused on problem solving. |
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One of my tasks is to get more programming knowledge into the team. So yes I have mentioned that I'm sometimes active on this site and even forwarded the link. But as far as I know, none of them has registered yet. |
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I'm a recruiter (no, not fishing, just answering). I like the idea of using rep points, as long as the recruiter/ manager checks for quality of the questions along with the quantity of points. Might be cool to include a couple of links to answers you're proud of having given/ have gotten high useful ratings for (high quality, ie not "noob!"). I was repping a candidate like that, I'd probably make that part of the pitch to get them in the door. Also: If you're worried about a manager wondering what you were doing here during work hours - would you want to work for them? I mean, to me, great engineers don't work 9-5, they're always noodling around problems, and if part of how they learn is by teaching/ asking questions somewhere like SO, I think that's pretty freaking special. That may just be me, of course... |
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