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TL;DR;

We're replacing CVs with something you can use even if you aren't currently looking for a job.


Update (Jan 4): added an FAQ section to address some common questions & concerns


We've had a lot of announcements lately about changes to Stack Overflow, including the addition of Documentation, the Power of Teams, and our plan to serve programmers better by integrating Jobs.

we're back

We started by updating the profile so you could show off a bit about who you are but now we're expanding this further into something we think will be called the Developer Story.

What the heck is a Developer Story?

I'm glad you asked! It's the way we envision you showcasing every aspect of your developer identity. Here's what we think it will look like:

Developer story mockup

Who is the Developer Story for?

Stack Overflow is the place where developers come to build and share knowledge, and as a result, build reputation for those contributions. It's also a place where you can help write Documentation, join a Team that you contribute to, or even look for a job. Now, with the new developer story, we're making it about who you are and what you do, and that's available to everyone regardless of how you use the site.

everybody gets one

We've designed this to be a better way for developers to share what they've built and done, regardless of whether or not they're job-hunting now. We know that ~40% of developers who sign up are interested in hearing about job opportunities, but for the rest of you, it may just be a way to show off to your peers.

  • If you're looking for the job you deserve, this is an upgrade to our old "Careers CV". It's designed to emphasize what you've built and technology you've used, and remove the useless stuff that traditional resumes contained
  • Got a job you love? Share your accomplishments in a way that wasn't possible until now. Your story is all about your journey as a developer.

Whether you are purely a Q&A user or you are using your Stack Overflow profile to show potential employers, the story gives everyone a way to show off how awesome they are as a developer.

We already have a profile, why do we need a Developer Story?

The profile isn't going anywhere. Every user gets one when they signup for Stack Overflow; it is a blend of your biography, your tags, and, if you provided one, your job title and where you work. Many of our users have a completed profile, but it doesn't provide a full picture of who you are, and we're trying to fix that.

The developer story goes much further by giving you the ability to provide more details of your history as a developer. We want developers to tell their story, their way, by highlighting:

  • Your current role and prior roles
  • The technologies that you use, and the tags that you participate in on Stack Overflow
  • Public artifacts like open source projects, applications & software, books or blogs you've written

We know that when developers talk about what they do, they'll share: What they build? Where they build it? And what tech was used? The answers to these questions don't fit in the current profile, but they have a place in your story. The new story gives a bigger picture of who you are and what you are proud of. Whether it's the school you are attending or have attended, your GitHub activity, your open source projects or apps; you'll be able to have everything you’ve done or are doing in a single place for the others to see.

Most of your story will be visible to people viewing your profile. But if you are someone who wants to keep your Stack Overflow activity separate from your career activity, don't worry: there will be privacy options to help you control who can see what.

FAQ

What problem does this solve?

  • It gives you a way to showcase your skills, and maybe one day find a job
  • It replaces the existing, traditionally-structured CV with something that you can use even if you aren’t currently looking for a job
  • It does a better job of showing what matters to developers and employers than traditional CVs by focusing on what you’ve done and not just where you’ve worked or studied

What happens to existing CVs just brought in from Careers?

Developer Stories are designed to replace CVs. We’ll have more details on this in the future, but all existing CVs will be carried over into this system, and we’ll preserve all existing privacy settings, so if your profile is private the Developer Story will also be.

Is Stack Overflow becoming a social network?

No. There will be no friends, lists, or other social connections, except indirectly through companies you have worked together at. This is just an expansion of the profile.

What if I want to keep it private?

Privacy will not be an issue: just like with existing CVs you can make it completely private, or hidden on the site but searchable to employers.

What if I don’t want one?

If you don’t want to share your history, then you don’t have to. Filling out the developer story is completely optional.

Will I still be able to export to PDF?

Yes, this feature will continue to work with the new developer story.

How will this work with my activity on other Stack Exchange network sites?

For now, the Developer Story page will only exist on Stack Overflow, but it will allow you to feature top answers from other network sites.

What's Next?

We think we've found a better way to display your history and what you've done, but we need your help to figure out what might be missing.

  • What else do you want to show off as a developer? Either to the developer community or to employers?
  • What are you proud of that you'd want to showcase?

This won't be rolled out for 6-8 weeks but, in the meantime, let us know what you think!

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  • 34
    I'm drawing a lot of parallels between this and my Stack Overflow CV. I don't want to have to enter the same information in two different places...
    – BoltClock
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:03
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  • 47
    @hichris123: Yeah, I thought this looked remarkably familiar, too, as if it was inspired by a certain social networking site...
    – BoltClock
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:04
  • 320
    Wouldn't it be easier to sell the site to LinkedIn, instead of morphing into it step by step?
    – user3717023
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:06
  • 69
    So it's StackedInBook? Jan 4, 2016 at 18:26
  • 49
    I think unless you're going to merge all the SE sites together, this misses an opportunity to come up with a cohesive profile of who you are. Click Here to see how awesome I am on SO, but I also administer servers so here's a glimpse of my BOFHness on ServerFault but I also do wicked things with databases, check out that version of me on DBA.SE. Please, completely disregard my bio though on Project Management - I was going through an experimental phase.
    – billinkc
    Jan 4, 2016 at 19:20
  • 37
    Does this remind anyone else of the Facebook timeline? Doesn't that disturb anyone else?
    – Linuxios
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:02
  • 92
    SO is trying too hard to become a Facebook for developers, or a LinkedIn with Q&A. What kinds of "stories" will I have? "Trying COBOL for the first time! YOLO!" If I have anything to share, I will tell my friends in chat, not sync SO with my Facebook Timeline
    – user3373470
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:56
  • 94
    How about implementing / fixing things that would be useful to users asking and moderating questions and answers, rather than something that is useful to becoming LinkedIn? At no point in my SO experience have I had a problem discovering things about power users I'm interested in; the information is already readily available on the profile, on GitHub, or on their personal site.
    – davidism
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:57
  • 33
    "It does a better job of showing what matters to developers and employers than traditional CVs" how? Besides "focusing on what you've done", which I'm pretty sure my Careers page already does, what specifically makes this better? This just looks like an unfocused mess trying to imitate other sites.
    – davidism
    Jan 4, 2016 at 21:40
  • 88
    Each time the community says "isn't this a social network?" you say "NO!", but the features keep marching in. Teams, now this. Just saying no doesn't make it so.
    – Linuxios
    Jan 4, 2016 at 22:28
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    what i liked about this site was that it wasn't like so many other sites with extensive self-promotion tools. le sigh. so much for that.
    – Stidgeon
    Jan 4, 2016 at 22:45
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    Is SE finally entering the we-have-nothing-left-to-do-so-lets-make-stuff-up-to-keep-our-jobs phase? Netscape, Norton's, Devshed, Winamp, it happens to the best of them.
    – Jason C
    Jan 4, 2016 at 23:59
  • 21
    This is a death blow to Careers. Really. It was nice to have, but not anymore - at least for me. It's not just moving the cheese around, which is fine, it's making the cheese into yoghurt. Jan 5, 2016 at 8:59
  • 39
    .. seeing shiny new features without any reasoning why they are needed is probably why this feature is so heavily downvoted. No one sees a need for it, and to top it off, it looks like Facebook. You have to build a case for why something is needed when trying to persuade others. This doesn't build a case at all, the "why its needed" is a list of features. Features aren't a compelling reason, generally. It's not going to be effective to drop changes on people without any explanation of why you are doing it (especially when the Facebook-like-ness factor exists).
    – enderland
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:52

31 Answers 31

298

Just my (small) two cents.

Personally, I'm not a huge fan of this idea. So, if this does indeed go ahead, I'd like to be able to opt-out of this fully. Or even better, follow the same procedure as Winter Bash where users have to explicitly opt-in.

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    Hide all teh tings!
    – user4639281
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:24
  • 205
    Seriously guys, by adding so many (unnecessary?) new features in the end you will transform SO to something less attractive at least for the devs. Sometimes you should keep things minimal and not overload it with new (uncalled for) features. Jan 4, 2016 at 18:37
  • 6
    @Giorgi It's not a new feature, it's an upgrade of an existing feature (Careers CV). And to your point, we're still working hard to make Q&A better and we'll continue doing it.
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:46
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    @StéphaneMartin Ok but at least it should be optional, and privacy has to be accounted for. My point is if you invent mobile phone and it is successful no need to add features to it slowly such that in the end it transforms into a refrigerator say (which can still make calls of course), and everyone stops using it :) Jan 4, 2016 at 18:51
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    @Giorgi We'll take care of the privacy and you'll be able to hide yours on SO :) (and manage your privacy)
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:52
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    @StéphaneMartin You may want to make it more clear in the proposal that it will be a replacement for the developer CV. It seems to be a common misconception that this will be in addition to everything else.
    – user4639281
    Jan 4, 2016 at 19:03
  • 1
    @Giorgi My point is if you invent mobile phone and it is successful no need to add features to it slowly such that in the end it transforms into a refrigerator say (which can still make calls of course) Ooooh NO! I'm not using a refrigerator that can still make calls.
    – KhoPhi
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:15
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    @Giorgi, Seriously guys, by adding so many (unnecessary?) new features in the end you will transform SO... - Yes, new features will transform SO and the web. It's the way that community operates and some of the features might end up pulling away from the main site sometimes. If that happens and is bad, it can be a learning experience for the company and community
    – Reed
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:39
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    @Giorgi All I want to do is answer questions and yell at people that ask questions wrong. And I'm all outta questions.
    – Rob Grant
    Jan 4, 2016 at 21:33
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    @RobertGrant didn't get the joke :) Jakar:Yep but people can voice opinion to prevent mistakes Jan 4, 2016 at 21:38
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    @Giorgi Robert's joke may be a reference to Duke Nukem. Search for "bubble gum". :)
    – Cypher
    Jan 14, 2016 at 23:11
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    @Cypher Which in turn is actually a reference to 'They Live' en.wikiquote.org/wiki/They_Live Jan 20, 2016 at 0:07
  • I would also appreciate an explicit opt-in, I don't want to be pushed into this like when Facebook came up with 'News Feed' (puts gun against own skull)
    – Rice
    Oct 12, 2016 at 15:57
238

I do not like this idea.

Our goal is not to show off or present our personal achievements, that's what "rep-addicts" do. It is to build a useful and comprehensive set of answers to programming problems.

How would the change you propose make the Internet or at least Stack Overflow a better place? It is all about dragging focus away from the site's core (which is concentrating on clear and easy-to-find information) towards a place where everything you do is collected in your personal portfolio of actions. That's a social network.

Please remember that users are not our most valuable resource. It's the content posted by them.

Please note: I can't deal with words, so I stole some of them from Cody Gray. He really hits the spot with that post, although on a different topic.

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    The internet is not a zero-sum game. Adding a developer story is, to me, a logical complement to StackOverflow, and I don't believe it takes anything away from SO. If you're not interested in it, you don't need to use it. Assuming of course that SO isn't going to be overlaid with an obnoxious developer story pop-up every time you visit. If SO can provide valuable information and a source of candidate or a better way to showcase my skills, then that's a win-win to me. I think that does make the internet a better place. Jan 4, 2016 at 18:43
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    "How would the change you propose make the Internet a better place?" - It gives developers better tools for showing their past and getting a better job in the future. Remember, Stack Overflow isn't just a Q&A site anymore. We're expanding to provide more and better tools for developers. This answer is great if we were only focusing on Q&A, but that's no longer true. The feature is a great addition to the Jobs section being integrated. Not to mention, it's completely optional.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Jan 4, 2016 at 21:26
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    @ColinYoung: "The internet is not a zero-sum game" It's not far off. I'm already at a huge disadvantage in the jobs market because I do not have an active GitHub profile. The last thing I need is for SO to become yet-another-thing-I-need-to-have-a-complete-and-active-profile-on in order not to be completely left behind. Jan 5, 2016 at 1:16
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    Also keep in mind, that while a few companies might love this for their hiring, the overwhelming majority of jobs/hires will still be at other places which won't use this system. So most of us not applying for the latest-and-greatest-tech-shop will have to do yet another online thing...
    – enderland
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:09
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    @LightnessRacesinOrbit Your SO reputation should be enough to "repay" for the fact that you are "missing" a GitHub profile ;) Jan 5, 2016 at 21:39
  • 1
    @Giorgi: It does help! Jan 5, 2016 at 22:31
  • You can't state what "our goal" is, only what "your goal" is. In your first sentence you acknowledge many SE members contribute for different reasons to you ('rep-addicts') and it's rather arrogant to suggest that just because you do not want to promote yourself through SO, others don't.
    – Mr. Boy
    Apr 15, 2016 at 12:09
90

What problem does this solve?

It seems it is solving this one:

Stack Overflow doesn't allow you to have a social media profile/resume

Rather than a clear, tangible problem that I, as a user and contributor to Stack Exchange, want to have resolved by a social media profile/resume.

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    I think this is a pretty fair question. Any feature request that comes from the community gets immediately challenged by the question "what problem does this solve?" and I can't see any reason we shouldn't ask the same of the features being imposed rather than requested. The same question is asked elsewhere but that answer starts with a much more polarizing statement.
    – user229044 Mod
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:37
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    @meagar & enderland: Agree this is a fair question that wasn't explicitly answered in the post. We've added it to the FAQ section. Jan 4, 2016 at 21:46
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    @DavidFullerton: Except... not really. Your "what problem does this solve" section lists what you perceive to be the benefits of the new feature, but does not name a problem that exists without it. Jan 5, 2016 at 15:08
78

I don't personally like this idea. It is explicitly stated that this will not replace the profile, but that's exactly what it is. It's a second profile page dressed up to look like a mix between LinkedIn and Facebook. It brings nothing new to the table and doesn't seem to do much of anything better than the aforementioned social networks and profile page or the current CV page.

I feel like this does a few things poorly:

  1. It distracts from the core of the site, which is Q&A. I get the push recently with Jobs/Careers. It makes sense and, for the most part, I feel SO has done it fairly well and the changes have been mostly good. But this feels more like Jobs is encroaching on the Q&A which is highly disappointing
  2. When the Teams feature was first announced, this was included in the post:

    People can only ask questions about the team on the team page. Wait, does this mean Stack Overflow is a social network? Emphatically no.

    This type of page, integrated more tightly into the main site feels more and more like a social network. We're no longer sharing our knowledge with each other, we're sharing our lives. I do not support that direction for SO and I very much hope that this is reversed.

  3. It is quite tightly integrated into the profile. Currently, there is just a button (not a navigation tab) to my CV, which makes sense. Jobs is not SO and I have seen it said time and time again that there is no intention for it to be. The CV itself is only half-styled to look like SO and feels separate.

    This puts it as one of the pages of your profile. It is now actually part of SO. It completely looked like SO. You're not leaving SO and going to SO Jobs/Careers, you're on SO and looking at someone's resume. I think it's distracting and unneeded. Will Jobs link over to this page when a company looks me up? If that's the case, you're now leaving Jobs to go to SO as well.

  4. The name is fairly awkward, very generic and, again, lends itself to a feature of a social network, not a Q&A site.

This feels like an attempt to merge Jobs and StackOverflow, whether it is intentional or not. And while Jobs is a decent product and one that I have used (or at least filled out) for a couple years, I really, really hope this doesn't happen. StackOverflow is a Q&A site. It is not a careers site or a social network or a blog or anything like that. It is a place to ask and answer questions, to share your knowledge, and to become a better developer, which it most certainly has helped me become.

To be fair, I do like some of these features. Overall, I really like the design work (minus the SO header/navigation), especially the tag highlights, and would really like to see much of it integrated into the current CV.

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    For the record: It isn't a replacement for the profile, it is a replacement for the CV.
    – user4639281
    Jan 4, 2016 at 21:11
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    @TinyGiant Yes, I realize that and I make note of that in my post. I feel that it acts more as a second profile page than a CV the way it is currently setup, however. With some changes, mainly moving it out of the profile area, I think that (and most of my complaints) could be eradicated
    – Josh
    Jan 4, 2016 at 21:20
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    Well, that's why we bring it up for discussion here. If we just designed stuff in private and a/b tested it to determine what was worth keeping, we'd end up with Facebook. And no one needs that many crashes.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 3:23
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    Q&A isn't the sole focus of Stack Overflow anymore. It may be a huge portion of it, but the intention is that Jobs and Documentation are brought under the same umbrella as equal partners, and equal partners deserve equal exposure on the profile page. This very much is a merge of Jobs into Stack Overflow.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Jan 5, 2016 at 7:43
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    I don't see Jobs really fitting in though, @animuson. Q&A and docs are community efforts that, to some degree, benefit mankind. Jobs benefits employers, individual devs, and SO, because it's its main cash cow, thanks to IT being an insanely wealthy industry with a great demand for workers. Which is fine - but I did appreciate it being tastefully visually separated from the community efforts, and I'm not sure I like it being shoved into SO's main menu
    – Pekka
    Jan 5, 2016 at 8:41
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    @Pekka웃 Jobs is a more visible link, but it's still just a link (like the Careers links in the footer and site switcher are/were). If you don't want to use our job board, you don't have to. A lot of developers are looking for jobs, though, and we have a whole job board dedicated just to programming jobs, so we've made it easier for them to find.
    – Laura
    Jan 5, 2016 at 14:59
67

I downvoted, but not because I dislike the feature. Not at all - it looks awesome. I don't care whether it resembles a Facebook timeline or not; this one has a different and clearly defined purpose.

What I'm distrustful of, and why I downvoted, is the long-term direction that is implied by this growing fusion of Stack Overflow proper and Careers.

It was always understood that Careers exists to make the company money, while getting developers better jobs. And that's great! I hope it makes oodles of money.

But Careers is a fundamentally different service from the traditional Q&A, and the upcoming docs feature, in that it isn't about building a pool of knowledge that is for the ages (to a degree), a selfless effort of experts that transcends the individuals working on it (to a degree).

Careers exists to serve the selfish interests of employers, individual developers, and Stack Exchange the company. It is powered by the fact that IT is an industry with gigantic resources and a desperate need for apt workers. And that's all fine - but it should continue to be kept as separate as possible from Stack Overflow the community effort, without hiding it completely.

That ostensibly a great percentage of developers has expressed a need to use Careers (although I find the 40% statistic very questionable) doesn't change this fundamental difference.

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    I don't know what you want out of this based on what you have entered. It is seperate, if you don't want a job or aren't looking for a job don't click the jobs link.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:29
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    @JonH a giant link in the main menu doesn't satisfy my definition of "separate".
    – Pekka
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:31
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    A giant link? Its the same size as the other links. Your rant is not justified if that is your issue...you're whining now.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:31
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    @JonH I'm not sure my post could be reasonably classified as "rant." I'm just feeling a certain amount of unease behind the recent changes around Careers, fearing that there may be a long-term strategy that is more influenced by VCs' goals than "making the Internet a better place" (and is designed to give Careers more emphasis in the ecosystem than it should have.) Whether that fear is justified, I don't know; it may not be. But right now, I have it
    – Pekka
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:45
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    I understand the concern, but I think a lot of this comes down to how badly we've communicated the goals for and problems with Careers in the past. Internally, keeping it at arm's length has meant a lot of duplicated effort and a lot of wasted effort on both the Careers and core Q&A dev teams; this is bad for everyone - even if you're not interested in Careers, the fact that we've spent years pouring resources into people and projects that can't ever benefit Q&A should be worrying. That made sense when it was a couple people working on an experimental project, but... It ain't 2010 anymore.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:46
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    @Pekka웃 - Money is needed to pay rent, to pay for heat (it isn't cheap and NY is cold), to pay awesome programmers. To me Q&A has not changed any differently than it has been (aside from great features). I mean be honest, the Q&A here is pretty awesome. It's amazingly fast, its amazingly simple, and each day minor changes are noticed that makes Q&A all the better. If you were seeing some sort of changes that hindered Q&A I'd agree with you. But I see quite the opposite. I also see a lot of the developers / designers always mention that they are sticking to ensuring Q&A is awesome.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:52
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    @Hynes I don't disbelieve the poll, I'm just not sure it can/should be reasonably used as a justification for making Careers a super prominent feature.
    – Pekka
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:55
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    Well, maybe that's part of the problem, @JonH. We've spent an awful lot of time trumpeting work like this (because we're in unknown territory and desperately need feedback), but not so much when it comes to the more incremental changes to Q&A - unless you're following status-completed across meta sites, changes there are a lot less noticeable. For years we've made a point to make some sort of improvement every week, but we're not always so good about announcing it. Maybe a year-end wrap-up would help?
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:55
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    @JonH If you were seeing some sort of changes that hindered Q&A I'd agree with you. But I see quite the opposite. that is a fair point.
    – Pekka
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:00
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    @Shog9 - I think you are right...but you hit the nail on the head as you mentioned this is unknown territory. I think this is a pretty natural thing, including the responses here. It's pretty natural people become uncomfortable with changes they aren't accustomed too, especially big ones. This is a very big one...the bigger one was integrating jobs into SO. Truly I believe that the latter one so far to me is gaining traction. Not just by me, but others on the site. I don't have access to the analytics behind it, but I'd bet within time and within people becoming accustomed to things it..
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:00
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    I am also removing my down vote because I see your issue more with the comments side of it.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:02
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    For the record, I don't mind unknown territory at all. I don't agree with all those here who say that new things need to solve a clearly stated problem; many great innovations didn't. I just don't want to see the place subtly changed, long term, into a second coming of LinkedIn. With tens of millions of VC capital that eventually will want to see bottom line results, I think the community is somewhat justified in being distrustful about strategic changes - even though the team (at least those I know) is genuinely interested in building a product that makes the Internet better.
    – Pekka
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:03
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    I'm sure more communication would do a lot to dissipate the problem @Shog9. Frequent blog posts; perhaps a separate podcast highlighting various teams within the company, and revealing some of the strategic thoughts behind whatever changes are happening? SO has always been super transparent about so many things, why not about strategy, too, to some extent?
    – Pekka
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:04
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    sounds like a project I undertook last year. Nothing like moving a hill by hand to make you appreciate the natural beauty of erosion.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:48
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    Just chiming in that I'd be interested in the podcast - hopefully they don't mention my dreaded name with all the bug reports - or maybe thats a good thing.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 18:15
51

My biggest concern is that StackOverflow is going to become a job search site. My last company actually blocked employees from visiting LinkedIn. Their reasoning was quite simply that there is only one reason that people visit that site. I'd hate to see StackOverflow start getting blocked by companies, especially in the tech industry, just because, "We know that ~40% of developers who sign up are interested in hearing about job opportunities" - a statement I find dubious. If true, then StackOverflow is now already waaaay different from the StackOverflow I signed up to.

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    You probably signed up to Stack Overflow to help developers and/or to get help, and that's still the case. We'll even do more features so people could help more & get more help :).
    – Stéphane
    Jan 5, 2016 at 10:21
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    @StéphaneMartin - why don't you do those features instead of transmorphing SO into a social networking site in the first place? Jan 5, 2016 at 10:56
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    @DeerHunter We're working on it. The developer story isn't the only project we're working on at the moment. I'm sorry but I don't see the social network here. You have no friends, no list, no special connections except teams, users can't follow ou, can't contact you, you shouldn't often update your dev. story as it's the highlights of your dev life...
    – Stéphane
    Jan 5, 2016 at 10:58
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    @StéphaneMartin "You probably signed up to Stack Overflow to help developers and/or to get help" No, I certainly did not. I signed up for Stack Overflow because I agreed that creating a repository of lasting information, of answers to every programming question, is a noble goal that I could help with. Instead of facilitating this goal, Stack Exchange has encouraged "asking" (i.e. requesting the over-incentivized reputation-seekers to do your job for you) over answering, focused on quantity of quality, and made the quality bar harder to maintain as a moderator.
    – bjb568
    Jan 5, 2016 at 11:23
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    Becoming a social media site does not help achieve the original goal of creating valuable, lasting information. By focusing on "more features so people can help more", you further dilute the value in Stack Overflow. We don't need another Linked in, we need a site that helps programmers in the way the Stack Overflow was originally intended.
    – bjb568
    Jan 5, 2016 at 11:23
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    This point is very important. My colleagues might today be happy, or even proud, of my reputation on SO, as it appears I'm training to keep up with technologies and also able to solve problems. They wouldn't be so happy to see me polishing my public CV in order to leave them. Jan 5, 2016 at 15:06
  • 2
    @DenysSéguret You'll be able to keep the Developer Story private similar to how you can keep your CV private to employers only.
    – Taryn
    Jan 5, 2016 at 15:11
  • 9
    @bluefeet I understand that, and it's important. My concern is about how SO is perceived (especially by non users). I feel you should be cautious about this image. There was no problem when careers was independent, now there might be confusion. Jan 5, 2016 at 15:15
  • 3
    @bjb568 the "help" vs. "repository" debate seems semantic to me: I can't come up with any reason one would want to create "a repository of lasting information, of answers to every programming question" unless you think those answers will in fact be of use, which means they help, no? We've always been about a repository of useful information, which seems to clearly imply it helps someone learn/do/build something.
    – Jaydles
    Jan 7, 2016 at 17:10
  • If 40% of the people who visit this repository/help site are looking for jobs, then this site will be banned from my company I'm typing this from (a large scientific multinational) within the next two years.
    – ouflak
    Jan 7, 2016 at 17:13
  • 1
    @Jaydles My point is that the goal of satisfying the OP by doing their homework and the goal of helping future visitors by creating lasting information that is useful to many people are mutually exclusive. We need to focus on the latter and disencentivize using the site in the former way.
    – bjb568
    Jan 7, 2016 at 19:10
  • @Jaydles, @ bjb568, What does all that matter, if the end result is that StackOverflow becomes a job site banned from half the tech companies in the world?
    – ouflak
    Jan 7, 2016 at 19:23
37

I like the idea, but how do things like Top Answers (and other site achievements) work across other sites? Some of the answers that I'm most proud of and may want to show off as part of my story to a person who wants to learn about me as a developer or a potential employer aren't on Stack Overflow, but on Programmers (1, 2, 3), Project Management (1, 2, 3), or The Workplace (1, 2). Also, I think it would be pretty cool to show off that I'm a ♦ on Programmers, too.

I've read the comments, and I'm not sure if this is in addition to or in place of the CV that exists now. Something that I like is the ability to export the current CV to a PDF file. I actually do that instead of my resume. Is that feature going away? If it is, I still do have a LinkedIn profile that I maintain that can be exported to a resume-style PDF file.


I think that there's still a bigger picture issue here, though, and this goes to something I've said multiple times: All these posts say that they show features designed to "serve programmers better". But as someone who is both a programmer and a participant primarily on sites that aren't Stack Overflow, how are you actually serving me, a programmer?

To be totally honest, I really like these feature ideas. I like the idea of Teams and Documentation, and now this. I really like the Jobs integration into the core of Stack Overflow. But I still feel that if you aren't a "head-down into the code" developer, you're being neglected. What about the software managers and project leads? The designers and architects? The quality engineers and testers? Database administrators? People with a strong theoretical computer science background? The security-minded professionals? The DevOps engineers who also participate on Server Fault? The professionals who participate in Programming Puzzles and Code Golf and want to show off their posts there? People who work as software developers, and therefore want to show off their contributions aren't on Stack Overflow.

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  • 8
    You'll be able to put answers from other sites than Stack Overflow. The developer story will replace the Careers CV. This is why we need the community feedback, to see if something is missing :)
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:29
  • 1
    @StéphaneMartin That's good that I can pull answers from across the network. The only thing that may be missing that I can see is the ability to export as a PDF. I'd be slightly worried about UX, though. If you hit up someone's Developer Story page, see things from other sites, and then go to Profile and see a single site's content...that just seems weird to me. I do think that there needs to be time to look at all of the developer oriented sites in the network and how they play together, especially with respect to Teams, Documentation, Jobs, and now Developer Story. Jan 4, 2016 at 18:33
  • So now it is replacing the CV? Based on the question and commentary above I was under the impression this would be in addition to the CV. @StéphaneMartin
    – user4639281
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:33
  • 6
    You'll also be able to export as a PDF :).
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:34
  • 1
    @TinyGiant It'll replace the CV so people won't have to update their profile in 2 different places. We're also trying to create something better than a CV for developers with this developer story. And as it's hard to create something new, we need the community help :)
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:35
  • 1
    @StéphaneMartin Very good, then. I guess my final concern is how this looks to users (especially visitors, who may not be familiar with the SE network) when it's all hooked up. I don't want it to be clumsy when you're dealing with things that are primarily not on SO. This could be useful to me. All of these new features could be useful to me. But right now, everything is from the perspective of a user who is very active on Stack Overflow and kind of neglects other developer sites. Although I said the same thing about Teams and Documentation, too. Jan 4, 2016 at 18:38
33

I'm concerned that the "developer story" inflates the importance of StackOverflow contributions and diminishes the importance of doing a good job in the job you have. This might benefit SO in the short term by driving more traffic to the site, but you're not doing developers or employers any favors.

Developers should use StackOverflow because they want to, and because it helps them, not because they have to establish a strong SO profile in order to land a job.

If you make SO reputation an important factor in hiring decisions, you increase pressure on people to accumulate SO rep, which will lead to more problems for SO in the form of rep-whoring, dishonest voting, etc.

4
  • 9
    Out of curiosity, how much time did you spend looking at the example picture? Because what I see on there are important, non-SO oriented things: Positions, Certifications, Education, etc. So it seems to me like this is already going to be perfectly set for adding non-SO, job-hunt-important information.
    – Kendra
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:28
  • 2
    I had the same thought when seeing this feature, but then you can hardly blame SO for being successful at what it's doing.
    – Pekka
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:34
  • 5
    @Kendra And above all those non-SO things, practically right under the name, is SO (and other SE sites) reputation. And right below that, still above everything that employers normally care about, a list of your top-rated SO tags. I'm not saying there's no room for anything else, but certainly SO reputation and tags enjoy top-billing in the developer story.
    – Caleb
    Jan 4, 2016 at 21:14
  • 8
    @Pekka웃 I don't blame SO for its success, but that success is due in large part to the quality of questions and answers. SO has enough trouble already with people trying to game the system, and that'll only increase if rep becomes a more important factor in hiring decisions. Put differently, I think there's a chance that SO is taking itself too seriously, and in the long run that could damage the real value of the site.
    – Caleb
    Jan 4, 2016 at 21:24
27

After the dust has partially settled, I think a better TL;DR might have been:

TL;DR: We're adding a radically different look to CVs

Because:

  • the "Developer Story" is replacing the CV
  • existing CVs are being ported over
  • it conveys all the same information as the CV

To me, that adds up to... It's just CVs. Re-done, in a new layout.


So:

What about those of us who actually like and use the existing CVs?

I liked it so much that I (lazily) redirected http://meagar.net to my CV. It's my primary resumé, and I spent a lot of time making it look right. I have no desire to have it reformatted into some weird timeline view of the same data, which will render it completely unusable as a resumé.

For those of us who want a more traditional resumé instead of a "story", will there be an option to opt out of the Developer Story, while still keeping our CV?

3
  • 4
    I completely agree. I actually like the old, minimalistic CV. I definitely won't be using the new "story". Jan 5, 2016 at 16:01
  • 4
    Additionally, with the death of CVs... how will we apply to jobs using SE Careers? Will we submit our Developer Stories as our resumé, or will we now be forced to upload a separate resume when we apply? I can't imagine that the Developer Story will be well-received as a resume by most hiring managers.
    – user229044 Mod
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:07
  • 5
    I think that if that had been the TL;DR from the start, the reaction might have been better. It's sad to see this battle between the staff and community.
    – Linuxios
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:16
22

Even after the edits, I don't think the OP's presentation addresses the fundamental suspicion it raises with me;

we are the product which is being sold, and Jobs is the service being developed here

If this is true, then the presentation should be up-front about it. If it is not true, the presentation should explain in much more convincing terms how this is helping us, the users of this site. That makes my answer basically a duplicate of "which problem is this supposed to solve, again?" comments which have been posted here in droves, but I could not see this particular aspect being addressed in comments or answers.

I'm not personally very deeply engaged in the "Let's not ever turn Stack Overflow into a social network" discussion which is so prevalent here, although obviously that is also a factor here. Social networks can be useful and fun, but don't repeat the mistakes of LinkedIn (hostile spam factory to anybody who is not a member) or Facebook (betray the trust of your users as a matter of course).

3
  • 2
    Totally agree about linkedin, I really don't want to be a part of it and I feel it's almost obligatory to fill out my cv here, but am most ambivalent about it and toggle between making it public and private
    – user3956566
    Jan 5, 2016 at 12:11
  • 2
    We've always had a CV in Careers, as a part of the integration with Jobs this is our way to integrate it into SO. This isn't new feature, the CV has always been here, we're just upgrading it.
    – Taryn
    Jan 5, 2016 at 12:56
  • You know what they say: If you're not paying for the product, you are the product. Even on SO today it is like that (with the ads).
    – Magne
    Nov 23, 2016 at 13:49
17

You're claiming that the developer story is an improvement over a classical CV, but I'm not really convinced, maybe in part because this meta post doesn't actually argue why this kind of structure is better.

The timeline view doesn't convince me at first glance. Mixing all kinds of information into this one timeline doesn't work well in the example screenshot for me. Some pieces of information are much more important than others, positions compared to top answer on SO for example. Not all information in there is a good fit for a timeline, it doesn't really matter all that much when that SO answer or blog post was posted. But this makes it much harder now to figure out the timeline of jobs as other information is squeezed in between there. It also seems to have less information in some parts compared to a typical CV, e.g. I can't see from the screenshot for how long the user was a developer at Github.

What problems does the timeline view solve? I see mostly drawbacks compared to a categorized view.

Another thing that doesn't look entirely right to me is the use of SO tags simply to refer to certain technologies. That might be a general issue with Careers, but it just doesn't look right to me. Someone unfamiliar with SO might wonder why that guy can't properly write MongoDB or AngularJS and instead writes in all lowercase with a dash that doesn't belong there. Tag naming and divisions are decided with the needs of SO in mind, do we also take the needs of Careers and Developer Stories into account now? Of course tags can somewhat work for this purpose, but they weren't really designed for this purpose and it shows.

5
  • 2
    I appreciate the feedback. I'll point out a few things - employers will have the ability to look at candidates with either a traditional sorted view or the new view; we're still working out design details but I believe we will have start/end dates on employment in this view. Part of the reason for the new view was to due with the integration of careers into SO, the existing CV had a lot of issues and since we assigned devs to integrate it, we decided to revamp the CV and make it something that users not looking for jobs could also use.
    – Taryn
    Jan 5, 2016 at 19:47
  • 3
    @bluefeet Since the entire point of a CV is to communicate experience and skills to employers, how could making it "something that users not looking for jobs could also use" possibly be an improvement? I get that there are certain similarities between a CV and a SO profile, but they're fundamentally different things. I don't necessarily want to share my CV with my SO compatriots, and I don't necessarily want to share my SO profile with prospective employers. When you apply for a job, do you enter your name as "bluefeet"?
    – Caleb
    Jan 6, 2016 at 21:13
  • @Caleb Say I'm a fresh out of college user who has education details, maybe a few open source projects or an app that I've worked on and I'm proud of, basically a portfolio without work experience but they want to display that to the community - there will be options to show that publicly, even if you aren't looking for a job. Then if the same user starts to job hunt, they'll have a story already filled out. As far as using aliases, the plan is to have settings in place so "bluefeet" wouldn't be the name associated with the job application. Private details will stay private for employers only.
    – Taryn
    Jan 6, 2016 at 21:22
  • @Caleb When it comes to sharing your CV with the rest of SO, you don't have to. You'll be able to keep it private if you want, but for those users who want to display what they've done, etc in the developer story they can.
    – Taryn
    Jan 6, 2016 at 21:39
  • 1
    @bluefeet I certainly hope that you guys will do a fantastic job building an interface that makes this all very clear, but right now it sounds like there's going to be one place to enter information that will be used in (at least) two very different ways. Despite unlimited funds and a horde of designers and engineers, Facebook hasn't done very well at that sort of thing. I guess I'll have to wait and see. Separate interfaces for profile and CV would make a lot more sense, with perhaps a button to populate one from the other.
    – Caleb
    Jan 6, 2016 at 23:12
15

What do employers think of getting this upgraded CV?

I've applied to a few companies via careers. Several seem more open and 'start up-ish' and would be open to something like a Developer Story. However, others have been to established, large companies. I can't see someone in HR looking at a "Developer Story" and viewing it favorably when the 100s of other applications they receive are simple resumes. Sure it will make you stand out, but will it be in a good way?

Personally, I like the idea of the developer story, but I am concerned with what will be presented to potential employers when a developer applies to a job. What will that side of the change look like?

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    IIRC, the goal is to subtly discourage employers from leaning on these horrible, antiquated systems by offering something better. Of course, that won't happen overnight. Heck, there are still jobs on our own hiring page that require you to either upload or plain-text paste a CV, so it'd be a bit hypocritical if we didn't allow for that sort of thing.
    – Shog9
    Jan 4, 2016 at 19:44
  • 4
    Which is a great goal. Seriously. I'm concerned about the time period between now and when everyone sees the light though. I like Careers/Jobs and Developer Story looks like it'll fit in to that area well. But, I don't want to be at a disadvantage because I'm using SOJobs vs heathen developer who found a company's HR page and is working through their portal and is uploading a poorly formatted resume but that flows into their HR system much better than a "story" does.
    – Andy Mod
    Jan 4, 2016 at 19:49
  • 1
    Well, we provide an export function for this now, so I don't see why we'd drop that. Would kinda be shooting ourselves in the feet to say, "no large employers with tons of jobs need apply", right?
    – Shog9
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:06
  • 1
    The export now, though, is a resume/CV, which makes sense because that's what I input into Careers. It has the various sections we all know - Experiences, Education, Certifications, etc. Are you saying that the Developer story will export back out to a CV with the same breakdown? I assume so, but want to make sure I understand.
    – Andy Mod
    Jan 4, 2016 at 20:13
  • 2
    @Andy Yes, you can export to the much more traditional CV / resume layout that exists right now for those companies that insist. Jan 4, 2016 at 21:49
  • 1
    As someone who has recruited before, directing me to this site would remove you from my "eligible candidates" pile immediately.
    – user593806
    Oct 12, 2016 at 13:37
12

I'm concerned about merging the Careers/Jobs CV with my SO Profile.

  • For me, the CV is where I want to emphasize the professional aspects of my "story".
  • The SO Profile might be where I can add fun aspects of my "story" that I might not want when presenting myself as a professional.

Of course people looking for candidates can easily follow the link to my profile from the Jobs CV and see those "less-than-professional" comments, but that would be something they intend to do, not something forced upon them.

Finally, if this is something that's going to happen anyway, I'd really like to have something up front on whether I'm actively looking for a job or not. I already have enough recruiters hitting me up every day ;).

1
  • 1
    It'll be shown to employers if you actively said you're looking for a job and meet the requirements, other than that, it'd be used just for the community (and could be hidden if needed).
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 19:05
11

I noticed some stuff on the sample timeline like "Top answer". Does this mean that the story will be partially written by SO automatically, for example with milestone privileges? Or does the user have to explicitly add those kinds of on-site achievements?

2
  • 6
    Regarding on-site achievements, it'll be limited to "top answers" and they'll be added manually by users. We want to keep specific privileges under activity and profile.
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 17:56
  • 4
    I think it would be nice to be able to have some of that stuff semi-automated, i.e. pull in my top answer, but allow me to approve it for publication if it changes or something like that. Jan 4, 2016 at 18:27
11

Others have already said this but I'll say it again.

Read what's missing only if this is true otherwise just don't

The end goal for this change (plus any other surprises down the line) is not to turn Stack Overflow into a social networking site (developer social network or best jobs ever)

What's missing

  • Proficiency level on tags. Just because someone does not answer questions on something does not mean he/she doesn't know about that. Something to show self-rating of various tags. Something like this. See left hand side under the heading knows
  • Tag wise timeline. If I want to find when some one used a tech can I see a tag wise timeline?
  • Import from LinkedIn. Many people have the information available there. Need to import somehow. e.g. Certifications
  • Keep it opt in by default like Hats.
  • Clearly state in the main post that you are not trying to turn Stack Exchange into a social network. Why? A good reason can be this - Search "The investors". If you try to turn it into more like something else why should people not use the original thing itself?
6
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    Just a quick note regarding LinkedIn...we used to have an import from LinkedIn feature on Careers, but we recently disabled it because LinkedIn changed their TOS and the new terms did not allow us to continue offering that integration. Unless LinkedIn changes their minds, we won't be able to offer any import functionality.
    – Laura
    Jan 4, 2016 at 22:24
  • @Laura Fair enough Jan 5, 2016 at 5:27
  • 1
    What about import from a text file? I can save my LinkedIn profile and you folks could import it. I really don't want to re-enter all of it.
    – Randgalt
    Oct 12, 2016 at 5:47
  • @Randgalt This seems fine but wouldn't it be tedious? Say I make a change in LinkedIn then I need to make a change here also. Also you need to mention the person Oct 13, 2016 at 13:21
  • @Laura need to mention for the above comment Oct 13, 2016 at 13:21
  • @Randgalt and Aseem: I no longer work at Stack Overflow, but I imagine that importing from a text file is not going to rank highly in the list of features to be implemented. It doesn't save that much work (you'll still have to remember to download from LinkedIn/upload to SO), and the data in the text file won't be structured...which means the SO software would have trouble figuring out what to put where in a profile.
    – Laura
    Oct 13, 2016 at 19:14
11

Coming at this with the perspective of looking for new team members, I really like the idea. My gut feeling is that it's going to give me a better impression of the person than a traditional CV/resume does.

Echoing concerns from some of the comments, however, as a developer I want to reuse my existing content from elsewhere in the Stack Exchange universe, so I'd like to see the story and a combination of additional information and curated stuff from elsewhere on Stack Exchange (including from my jobs profile). And why limit it to just Stack Overflow? My questions and answers on Home Improvement can give insight into how I approach problem solving, while other sites like Ask Different, Drupal Answers, etc. are more directly related to coding. I don't want to have to duplicate information because maintaining it becomes a nightmare. Just look at any online discussion of commenting code for an illustration of the issues that can come up.

6
  • 1
    As mentioned in the comment to Thomas Owens you'll be able to include content from other sites.
    – Taryn
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:43
  • Yeah, @Thomas Owens' answer wasn't showing when I started writing that... Jan 4, 2016 at 18:48
  • 3
    @bluefeet We still don't know what it's going to look like for a user when you include content from other sites. I'm concerned about the UX, especially if you link to it and people who aren't familiar with how the Stack Exchange Network works find it. Careers is isolated enough from SO that it seems OK when people see content from multiple sites. But what happens when a story is populated mostly or entirely with non-SO content? Will it be confusing to people? Especially when they click the big SO link at the top, yet large amounts of your story come from Programmers or Drupal? Jan 4, 2016 at 18:49
  • @ThomasOwens You raise a very good point which is partly why we brought this to the community before we have a working version. While I don't know, at this time, what it will look like it's something we need to be aware of.
    – Taryn
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:52
  • UX will definitely be a major factor, but I'd think that when I'm reading a developer's "story" it should be fairly clear when I'm reading each item why it is relevant, regardless of the source. If it's user-curated and something doesn't appear to be relevant, that in itself tells me something about that person. And if somebody is confused about Drupal answers in my "story" I'm not sure I want to be bothered by them... Jan 4, 2016 at 18:54
  • 3
    @bluefeet That's good. It's just disappointing when these cool features come out, but I can't use them because the things I'm good at aren't on Stack Overflow. I think that there needs to be an appreciation that not all programmers are on Stack Overflow - they are on Programmers, Project Management, Workplace, Wordpress, DBA, SQA, Drupal. Unix and Linux, and so on. I think I counted over a dozen SE sites that have questions and answers related to programming / software development. More thought needs to be put into how to show off content from all of these sites to serve programmers better. Jan 4, 2016 at 18:57
10

What happens to existing CVs just brought in from Careers?

Developer Stories are designed to replace CVs. We’ll have more details on this in the future, but all existing CVs will be carried over into this system, and we’ll preserve all existing privacy settings, so if your profile is private the Developer Story will also be.

What if I want to keep it private?

Privacy will not be an issue: just like with existing CVs you can make it completely private, or hidden on the site but searchable to employers.

I do not understand this. SE profiles and jobs have overlapping information; besides that, you present this feature as if sharing information on jobs is the same as sharing information on SE.

I don't mind future employers to know what my pseudonym is on the internet. I do mind if the entire world can link my online identity to my actual name. Being at the mercy of a mentally unstable person has learned me that one should give as little information as possible to anyone on the internet, and that you'll never truly learn who a person is until it is too late.

This is why my jobs profile is not visible on StackOverflow, but my StackOverflow account is visible in my jobs profile. It is why I have the name of my university on my jobs page, but not on my StackOverflow account. It is why I have my real name on my jobs page, but am named "-" on my StackOverflow account (yes, yes, I know, it says it is private, but SE wouldn't ask for it if they didn't use it for something, and I have no clue what it is used for)

With this kind of integration, I don't think StackExchange understands this. I guess I'll empty out my jobs page until this change goes live...

2
  • On SO we'll use your display name, not your real name, and you'll be able to hide your developer story on SO if you want and still be visible to employers on Careers (if opt in). We take privacy really seriously and you'll still be able to use SO with no personal data and apply to jobs with personal data (only shown to employers if you opt-in).
    – Stéphane
    Jan 5, 2016 at 12:02
  • 2
    @StéphaneMartin I always had the impression that SE takes privacy seriously, but the way the "hidden community" feature was introduced and treated so far was seriously dissappointing and makes me a bit worried about how SE treats any of the subtler privacy issues that can appear with this new feature. Jan 5, 2016 at 12:46
9

I had some misgivings about the general direction Careers is taking. While I still don't think Careers should be in the main menu, those misgivings have been reduced a lot through the team’s responses, and listening to a couple of podcasts.

So to critique the feature itself: it’s awesome!

  • It is a visual, chronological overview of a developer’s, well, development; much more fun to parse than a list of positions.

  • It encourages showing off your achievements to the world, which is great especially for devs who are shy or don’t want to come across as too braggy (because the story is a predefined format where it is required to list achievements, rather than a free-form textarea.)

  • A CV is expected to be complete. The developer story supports incompleteness. You can add just the two achievements you’re most proud of, or thirty of them. That massively lowers the bar to participating in the feature.

It’s really a reinvention of the paper CV for a new medium and I like it.

Yes, it is another feature encouraging devs to show off their work to the world. Yes, that leads to some potential negative tendencies we know from Facebook or LinkedIn: it could penalize great developers who just aren’t great communicators; it could lead to too much emphasis on appearing competent and too little on the actual work; it is easy to fake success; etc.) But all this already applies to SO in general, too, and is ultimately a philosophical question. Do we think these potential problems outweigh the benefits? I don’t.

That it looks like Facebook shouldn’t be a factor in a neutral, level-headed critique. Facebook has the money to buy great UI designers; there is nothing inherently bad in following the trends they set.

It's true that features like this encourage the creation of public artifacts that you can show to the world. You may not like that. But it has been SO's express mission from the start. Listen to the old podcasts. I agree this is an aspect we should be careful not to over-emphasize (so it doesn't lose all its value!) but it's always been in the site's DNA and part of its success.

Downsides / suggestions:

  • I could see this being more difficult in terms of getting a complete picture of a person’s employment history, the kind recruiters need so they can ask questions like „I see you moved from x position at y to z position at n 15 months after you started out at y; why didn’t you try to advance to x position at y instead?“ But I’m not a recruiter so I don’t know, and I suppose they will get to keep the CV.

  • There should be ways to distinguish between major and minor events. „Checked in three-line patch to project XYZ“ needs to look different from „got a job at Google“.

  • I personally would never add a visible „what I’ve been reading“ section to my profile and I’m not sure the system should encourage it. I get what it is trying to convey, but to me, a huge "what I’ve been reading" section sometimes makes people look a bit lame. It’s just… trying too hard to do all the right things. Dropping in stuff like „I realized from what xyz says in abc that…“ in the personal statement or a conversation just seems so much cooler. YMMV.

  • The name feels a bit off, at least if it's going to be displayed publicly. There's no better way to kill the magic of storytelling than calling it storytelling. I'd much prefer something neutral like "timeline".

3
  • 1
    Regarding the last point... I feel the name "Developer Yarn" was rejected without proper consideration.
    – Shog9
    Jan 11, 2016 at 15:07
  • @Shog9 "Developer Epic"?
    – Pekka
    Jan 11, 2016 at 16:12
  • 3
    I've got to say @Pekka웃, I really appreciate the fact that you took the time to write this up after chewing on the feature for a bit. The feedback is really helpful. IIRC, we are planning on showing the start/end dates for positions and employers will still be able to view the details in a sorted way, so that should take care of your first downside. At this time, I don't think we're 100% sold in the name, but naming is hard. I'm also working on a follow-up post to get out in the next few days to address some of the questions/concerns raised by the original post.
    – Taryn
    Jan 11, 2016 at 16:20
8

What might be missing

I often see users using their profile to:

  • List their own favorite contributions (questions and answers)
  • List their best achievements (badges and tag badges)
  • Provide a donation wishlist (books and assets)

Concerns

Unclear tech stack flexibility:

  • Can I add a tag to the tech stack that I didn't have contributed on Stack Overflow yet, but I have a great experience with? Yes
1
  • 3
    Yes you can add tags you didn't have contributed on Stack Overflow yet in the tech stack. You'll be able to showcase technologies you're great at, no matter your reputation.
    – Stéphane
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:41
7

TL;DR:

We're replacing CVs with something you can use even if you aren't currently looking for a job.

TL;DR; Customizability is important

  1. Replacing CV/Portfolio is a bad idea, this should be a separate feature; since they represent two different things.

  2. Developer Story should be customizable, utilizing things like favorites & options to control statistics.

  3. The term "Developer Story" would lead employers to assume it means the timline of your professional projects & honorable jobs they had over the years, as a developer. Technically, this isn't your story as a developer, it is your story on Stack Overflow.

  4. Statistics should show where most of your contributions are, in relation to tag-groups. Tag-groups are like the group of tags related to database, like transaction, sql, plsql, ..etc. Leaving customizing this to the user would solve its shortcomings.

3
  • 5
    The developer story is fully customizable and reflects things about you as a developer, not about you on SO.
    – Stéphane
    Jan 5, 2016 at 10:12
  • 1
    +1 for your avatar! (oh, and I agree with what you say ;)) Jan 5, 2016 at 11:58
  • The developer story allows you to bring things outside of Stack Overflow to your profile - like work you've done in open source or talks you've given. Or that blog post you wrote when you just got so fed up with [language] that your hair turned green and started singing 70s show tunes. It's only for employers insofar as how much you're looking for a job. Primarily, it's just for you, and yeah - it could help get you hired if that's what you need.
    – user50049
    Jan 6, 2016 at 5:50
6

Are two views needed, one for HR people, and another for the project manager that do understand how programmers think?

Otherwise there is a risk that by including something in your story that will be understood by the project manager, you will confuse the HR person and your story will never be seen by the project manager.

2
  • Employers will be able to view either the story view or a sorted view, which will be similar to a resume.
    – Taryn
    Jan 5, 2016 at 12:57
  • @bluefeet, that still does not help with trying to target cooperate HR types and project managers given they have a very different outlook on life. Jan 5, 2016 at 21:26
6

I've been ambivalent about the CV and actually toggle it between being public and private for that reason.

SO for me, has been a place I can come to for relaxation, education and to improve my programming skills. In fact the more pressure I'm under in my (outside SO life) programming the more questions I answer here, as a stress relief. So the idea of integrating my escape and refuge with my employment is counter productive for my experience here.

And just having it there and all the fan fare does feel like pressure from S.E.

It also feels like a sell out, it's a way for S.E. to make more $, get more views and expand it's platform. The one thing S.E. does better than anywhere (in my opinion) is have an online programming repository and Q&A site, it does this the best, and I honestly don't believe many of the other areas S.E. branches into are not comparable to S.O. programmers.se and the like, I think trying to be all things to all people (or as many as possible in this case) somehow degrades the credibility of the site.

Oh and once I started to fill out my cv, I cannot eliminate the technologies I want to work with, it only provides for a min of two tags, so it's not optional to opt out.

3
  • So the idea of integrating my escape and refuge with my employment it already is integrated. It will just look different and can be found with a different button
    – Tim
    Jan 5, 2016 at 12:19
  • @TimCastelijns I understand that, I don't like it.
    – user3956566
    Jan 5, 2016 at 12:23
  • 1
    FWIW, I can sympathize with this. There are very few times in my life I'd have wanted anything approaching a complete career history available online, to potential employers or anyone else - and particularly not integrated with one of the sites I used to blow off steam after work! That said, right from the start there've been people who've considered Stack Overflow to be their public portfolio and used their profiles to this end; I think there's room here to serve both groups.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 19:29
5

Ideas

  1. For privacy options I would advice to avoid putting anything that requires individual permissions; meaning getting email requests from lots of different people on my individual Story profile. That is something people can email you about.
  2. Allow us to manually approve all of the content that will be displayed in the Story.
  3. Regarding our Interests, allow us to select our favored Stack Exchange posts and add them to our Story. This can tie in very well if we want to link our interests with our Careers profile.
  4. Can Stories show the things we have the most current interest on? Whether it be personal or Stack Exchange related?
  5. How will Story have transparency between Admin and non Admin users?

Criticism:

  1. How can - Certified in X - be a reliable and provable content to add to Story?
  2. What is the value of having a Story when compared to a Careers profile?
  3. Not everyone asks great answers/questions and not everyone gets many views/votes either despite the effort. How can your effort or lack thereof reflect positively on the Story?
  4. If our story sucks (because we spend more time doing things outside Stack Exchange for example), can we choose not to have one?
1
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    Regarding your criticisms: 1) if you lied on a resume, most likely an employer will discover that, 2) the developer story is going to be a replacement of the Careers CV you won't have the details in multiple places, 3) If you don't have tons of votes on an answer, it doesn't necessarily mean you aren't proud of it. I've got good answers with minimal votes and I might choose to showcase it based on the content of the answer, 4) it's not going to be required to complete the story, but you'll be able to showcase things that you want even if it's not complete.
    – Taryn
    Jan 4, 2016 at 18:50
5

I think this should be just an optional extension to show some stuff you are proved about. However how is that relevant for someone else?

In the first plain facts are interesting. The current CV provides those informations perfectly IMHO.

If you would like to hire someone you might be interested in checking what that dev thinks about he has done. This should be optional and not mandatory. Not every developer likes it to maintain those stories, and Stack Overflow is no Social Network where it is important to show what you are doing just now. (This is the reason why I don't use Facebook and co)

In general I like the idea to point out some things you are proved about, but this should not replace our CV!

1
  • Employers will have 2 views for CVs, they will be able to view your details in a sorted manner (similar to a traditional resume) or the new story version. We're still of course working out all the details which is why we brought this to the community for feedback.
    – Taryn
    Jan 5, 2016 at 13:01
5

I do not care to reveal my date of graduation from university. Please make the date fields optional.

Meanwhile, my developer story does none of us any good, because it looks like I did not go to college.

1
5

Not a fan of the new system.

I want to emphasize what I want to emphasize, not the last things I happened to touch. Just because I submitted patches to 20 open source projects doesn't mean I want that at the top of my story with my more relevant and marketable experience buried several screens below the fold.

3

After learning that this will in fact export to a nicely formatted CV (similar to the current one) then I personally find no reason to not want this. I think this is a pretty clean change that fits well with the jobs integration of SO.

Before you go downvoting and ranting about this post remember this isn't all about you. Most comments or answers here state

I wouldn't use this / I don't want this / I'm not looking for a job

Please stop and consider that one day, yes one day, you too maybe looking for a job. At the end of the day the developer story showcases your talent. Companies (at least good companies) are changing nowadays. These companies love seeing stuff like this.

At the end of the day this thing translates to a CV, so for those who are concerned about that this can still serve as your exported CV. But to those who may have a lot of projects (github) this is a good place to keep all of this activity. The great thing is, if you don't want this information public then you simply don't put it on the site.

Before you bash this consider how it could help you and think long term, not just today but tomorrow. True story: A co-worker of mine, who was an intern, recently wanted to be brought in full time at the company we are at. Unfortunately, some company policy stated he could not be full time and have full time benefits without first graduating. He was able to use SO Jobs to help find a new career, that gave him (in writing) that upon graduation he would have a full time job. The current company he was working at could not meet his needs. SO Jobs gave him that opportunity.

So please, stop think and first try something out before giving up so easily. You all sound like my grandma when we upgraded her from Windows XP to Windows 7.

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  • 10
    Your "Before you bash..." is, if anything, a defence of the current system. Why change something that clearly worked very well for your coworker? And your "grandma" statement is just offensive. We are not luddites because we want to be told why radical changes are being made to existing systems that people are successfully using.
    – user229044 Mod
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:52
  • 1
    @meagar - because about 3-4 weeks ago I couldn't say the same thing as careers was seperate from SO. He didn't even know careers existed nor did he have any inclination to look for it. When it was integrated within SO is when he got his golden ticket. I use this as an example to what could happen with the feature of the developer story.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:54
  • 1
    If stating your rants are similiar to when we upgraded my grandma is offensive I don't know what world you are in. Relax, take a chill pill, life will turn whether you like it or not. Give me a break.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:55
  • 3
    We're not talking about the careers/SO unification. This isn't that. All your points in favor of Developer Stories are really points in favor of the careers unification which is a separate issue altogether.
    – user229044 Mod
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:55
  • 4
    No it means to accept change and give it a chance. I know where I am posting. Its clearly related to my post.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 16:56
  • 7
    Your argument that we should just "accept change" is based on your belief that one specific change (careers unification) was responsible for one specific good thing happening (your friend getting a job)? It's a pretty tenuous connection to say we should just "accept change and give it a chance" based on one experience with an unrelated change.
    – user229044 Mod
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:12
  • 2
    My example, was just that an example. When someone gives you an example, they don't say 100% will benefit, they give you an example. Whether you like it or not is just that you no one else.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:17
  • 5
    This actually is part of Integration, @meagar... Weird though that probably seems. Right now, things like CVs are just the output of old Careers code piped through an infernal machine; the long-term goal is to actually integrate the code as well as the UI (so that it isn't so foreign and out of place, and also so we're not maintaining so much duplicate stuff). This is the first step. The design may be a little bit ambitious, but hey - better to aim high & scale back as needed than slavishly copy the boring status quo and get nothing tangible for the effort.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 17:42
  • 6
    Downvoted for the "you sound like my grandma..." quip. It is quite disrespectful, both to those engaged in this discussion, and to grandmas. Jan 5, 2016 at 18:04
  • 2
    @WayneConrad - No grandmas, including mine were affected by anything I said.
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 18:05
  • 2
    You're right, there isn't @meagar. On the other hand, if we're gonna invest the resources in porting it, shouldn't we try & get something extra out of it? AFAIK, the idea here was to try & make the CV feature a bit more of a multitasker - something that could still benefit folks who aren't into Careers / Jobs. The more people it benefits, the more worthwhile the investment in developer time. And the more people who use it, the more feedback we get and the better we can make it - which you may have noticed was sort of a big pain-point for Careers features in the past.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 18:56
  • 3
    Not particularly, @meagar - that was the point of the integration "hack" put in place a couple weeks ago. You can see what a slavish port would look like (more or less) right now; the fact that it's running separately under the hood is hidden well enough to get the idea. Now... It's absolutely legitimate to look at that & say, "I like this better than what's being proposed to replace it". Sooner or later, we will re-write CVs, and the more feedback we get now the easier it'll be to decide what that ends up looking like.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 19:23
  • 1
    @Shog9 Well then... is the intent here to suggest Developer Stories as a proposed feature, and gather feedback? Or is it to announce to the community that Developer Stories is coming? You're making it sound now like the final form is unclear and still subject to big changes, while the original post and mockup seems to indicate that the form is pretty fixed.
    – user229044 Mod
    Jan 5, 2016 at 19:47
  • 3
    @meagar - I'm not sure what industry you work in, but when it comes to stuff like this its an endless cycle. There is no final form of anything IT related. Of course Developer Stories is coming, but that doesn't mean it will be perfect. It's the first beta phase of it. Nothing is pretty fixed, just because of the screen captures doesn't mean its 100% complete. Remember the post on job unificintegration or whatever the heck it was. After that post was made I filled over 100 bugs / feature requests..that too had screen shots. That simply doesn't mean it was fully done bug free...
    – JonH
    Jan 5, 2016 at 19:49
  • 3
    If it was fixed, we'd be telling you to go try it out, @meagar. Right now, it's a designer mock-up; until a few days ago, all the entries in that screenshot read, "lorem ipsum". No matter how convinced we might be that it's the cat's pajamas, we're nowhere near confident enough to actually build it without talking to folks here first; all feedback is welcome, and we'll try to make wise decisions based on what y'all tell us - doesn't mean we won't try something new, but a good argument in favor of doing something else is always worthwhile.
    – Shog9
    Jan 5, 2016 at 20:14
-1

I like it fine. I wish you could link to an item when sharing.

-1

Well... goodby then! I'm sure a lot will miss you and others won't even know you ever existed!

So long, and thanks for all the fish!

-2

I like the idea.

Yeah, it's all right. There's always those people who are just keen to dislike new features. That was never surprising, you know, and with things like the upgrades of Windows, and so on, people liked to dislike new features, but eventually they fell in love with it.

Developer Story is pretty much the greatest way I can show who am I to whatever employer. It's a rather a fascinating way to see the details and actually see how professional that developer is.

CVs and Resumes are pretty nifty, with proper styling you can get them to look so beautiful, but then, it's all "I worked at X" and "I studied at Y". Although these are necessary information, they really don't cover who the developer actually is. That is almost the same as looking at the specification of a computer without seeing or using it.

Developer Story is a good thing that Stack Overflow should finally introduce us, nearly all developers spend a fascinating time here, and it'd be great to establish a connection between our CV and our favorite developer website.

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