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I've seen this Meta post on whether or not it's acceptable to turn SO questions into blog posts, but I can't seem to find anything on the reverse relationship, so here it goes:

I am currently writing a post for my company's blog that deals with a programming situation that I think not that many people know what to do in, and could really help people who get stuck. Given that my company's blog is probably not going to pop up during Google searches for that topic, I wanted to know if, after I've completed the post, it would be acceptable to post a question (and immediately answer it in true "share your knowledge, Q&A style") on SO as well.

Would something like that be OK? Would it be more acceptable if I don't put a link to the company's blog in either the question or the answer (just to make sure that no one thinks that I'm trying to promote it or myself)? Are there any other tips that I should be aware of when doing this?

The post would be a general programming one, and not have anything to do with my company's products.

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    "Would it be more acceptable if I don't put a link to the company's blog in either the question or the answer?" Yes, I think that would make it more acceptable. Dec 4, 2014 at 13:27
  • I did something that here. The only thing I missed is that I dropped an answer into a close-worthy, too-broad question (I just didn't know back then). Hope you'll make a better question to land your answer at
    – gnat
    Dec 4, 2014 at 16:58
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    Just don't make it a fluff piece. Get to the point.
    – Ryan
    Dec 4, 2014 at 19:11
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    @Peter: Changing SO to Stack Overflow is absolutely pointless... Dec 6, 2014 at 17:51

2 Answers 2

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Absolutely, self-answer away! Incidentally, I remember reading that this was an intended use of the self-answer feature.

But, make sure to follow the rules:

  • The question needs to be an appropriate, high-quality Stack Overflow question. If this is a long blog post, it could easily be too broad.

  • The answer needs to be a high-quality Stack Overflow answer. I'm going to guess you won't have trouble with this one.

  • If the post is about your product, make sure to disclose your affiliation. If it's about programming in general, you shouldn't need to worry. Basically, check yourself against the self-promotion rules.

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  • The post will be on the longer side only because I'd be explaining it in more detail, whereas any SO question would obviously have a more simplified version of the situation. Dec 3, 2014 at 23:36
  • Should I also link to the blog post, or would that reek too much of self-promotion? Dec 3, 2014 at 23:37
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    @IronMan84 Its a pretty easy test. If you (or I) came across the question randomly, would we consider it high quality? If so, go ahead, if not, you need to refine it a bit. I'd link to the post (along with your summary in the answer of course) and disclose that you wrote it. Dec 3, 2014 at 23:38
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    In addition, make sure that the answer you post contains sufficient detail here to be useful if your linked site is unavailable for some reason in the future. The link should be to additional information, but the answer should be self-contained so that it remains useful even without the external info.
    – Ken White
    Dec 4, 2014 at 0:38
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    In addition, it should not be a duplicate.
    – Salman A
    Dec 5, 2014 at 22:03
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You don't specify your programming situation that you want to write about. Depending on what it actually is, it may not be a good fit for SO. You could look into programmers.stackexchange.com if it fits better there, but then it probably wouldn't get as much traffic.

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