Have you guys gotten a job from Stack Overflow careers?
migrated from stackoverflow.com Jan 9 '10 at 16:26
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Below is my success story.
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Not specifically from Careers (I haven't posted my CV, yet), but StackOverflow has very much been a factor in companies considering me for a position. It's a bit freaky the first time when some random programmer suddenly realizes they "know you" from your presence on Stack Overflow. |
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Well, there is one success story on the careers homepage already:
There are a few others as well, I'll ask the relevant parties to post here.. |
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In relation to Robert's story, I actually got my current job through SO, but back before SO Careers existed. (So, it pays to buff up your SO profile with good answers!) I was one of the first beta testers on SO, as was Mike Stone. Mike went to become one of the top SO users for a couple of months (at least until the big disagreement over question closing), so, he and I kind of knew each other through SO that way. Anyway, Mike came on the Stack Overflow IRC channel one day to get second opinions about a candidate he was interviewing that day. So, during that conversation, I mentioned the fact that I was looking for a job, and I suppose the rest is history. :-P Not quite a SO Careers success story per se, but still a SO career success story. :-) |
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I posted my CV on SO a few months ago and I've had great success. Being a fifth year university student and facing a terrible post-graduation job market, I've been working on my job search for the last year. Contacting companies on my own and working with career services on campus yielded a few results, but nothing that serious. After posting my CV on stack overflow, I've received several serious inquiries and I just signed with a company who originally contacted me through Stack Overflow Careers. I truly believe that SO helped me set myself apart from other potential candidates and let me give more than just bullet points about myself. Without this, I doubt I would have gotten as good of a position as I now have for after my graduation. This has taken a huge load off my mind as I try to finish up my final studies. Thank you so much for your great site, if it wasn't for Stack Overflow Careers I may have ended up working on a cruise ship for hair metal fans... seriously. |
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I wrote about my success story on my blog, but I didn't go into explicit detail about how Stack Overflow Careers (and ultimately Stack Overflow) helped. Let's step back, to the year 2007, about a year before Stack Overflow went live. We had an amalgamation of blogs and MSDN, but there was no place that programmers could call home. No definitive place to find answers to questions, only forums with half-vetted solutions. It was a dark time. Since I wasn't in a job where there were like-minded developers, there wasn't anywhere for me to figure out what to read, or who to follow. I had been following Joel's blog since 2000, and Jeff's since 2007, so when they announced that Stack Overflow had 'gone public', I joined as soon as I could. Over the last two years, I've found an immeasurable amount of useful information on every topic I've dealt with in programming. Stack Overflow has come to be my first reference when dealing with a software issue. I've spent a lot of time asking questions, answering questions, and editing other questions so that every Internet searcher can have the same experience I've had with Stack Overflow. Stack Overflow careers has become an extension of Stack Overflow's success. Since it's attached to a community that has some of the best programmers alive, it's easy for businesses to latch onto it to find great talent. The corollary is also true: companies that programmers want to work for are on Stack Overflow Careers. Fast forward to this year. I had just moved up to the Northern Virginia area and was working for a government contractor. Nothing against the company, but government contracting (by and large) is soul-sucking. Lots of process, no chance to make the software better, and every eye is on cost. No budget for making the programmers better, and each programmer is treated like a cog in a machine. As I said, soul-sucking. I had been looking at the Stack Overflow Careers board on and off for about 6 months when I found The Motley Fool, a company that seemed like a perfect fit. After taking their online assessment test, having a phone interview with them, and spending an entire day on-site interviewing, I knew I had found my home. Without Stack Overflow, I wouldn't have the knowledge I have today that would allow me to successfully interview, and without Stack Overflow Careers, I'd still be in a job I hated. |
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I wasn't actively seeking programming positions, when I was contacted by a stellar employer on StackOverflow Careers. At each step in the hiring process I became more excited about the company and now love working here. |
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I haven't personally used SO to look for a job. But asking, answering and reading SO questions does make me more knowledgeable about my profession, which is very beneficial in my current job, and it would be helpful were I trying to find another job. |
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Another success story: http://karlgrz.blogspot.com/2010/02/heres-to-new-beginnings.html
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I was contacted by a quite cool London start up. I wasn't 100% sure if I really wanted to relocate, but the technology this startup was involved with was just what I liked. I got to the third round of their interviewing process (one coding test, two interviews). Even though in the end they could not give me an offer, the experience was exciting and interesting. |
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Jeff just posted a blog about some: http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2010/01/careers-success-stories/ |
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