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Is Stack Overflow reputation marketable?
Would the bugger make a suitable investment for a busy company, knowing that he would spend most of is time on SO?
Would the bugger make a suitable investment for a busy company, knowing that he would spend most of is time on SO? |
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You might want to consider that the user with the second-highest rep on SO was hired by the company that knows better than anyone else just how much time he spends on the site. And he was not hired to answer questions. |
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I question this statement:
I was ranked #5 on StackOverflow at one point about a year ago, but I got there because of a highly-disfunctional work situation where I ended up putting far too much time into SO. I have since remedied the situation and now have a job that allows me to be productive for my actual employer. (BTW - nothing against my previous employer, I just wasn't a good fit there). The result is my Stack Overflow participation is (sadly) way down. I've dropped about a dozen spots already. It's not zero - I still browse and answer questions at work. It's just now at a more-appropriate level. The point is that hiring a high-rep Stack Overflow user doesn't guarantee you'll lose all their productivity to SO. It's more likely that either: 1) there's a good reason they're on the job market or 2) they really are just that good. Either way, a high reputation is a big positive for that user. Of course, they could just be a goof-off, but that's what interviews are for - so you can find that kind of thing out before hiring them. |
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Yup. I would then keep him on a workstation without a connection to the internet or SO. That would kill him |
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