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replaced http://stackexchange.com/ with https://stackexchange.com/
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Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contacthttps://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. https://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

replaced http://blog.stackoverflow.com with https://blog.stackoverflow.com
Source Link

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolvedposted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

Quoting Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow founder), over on What is Stack Overflow's business model?

Three ways:

  1. Job listings (e.g. the traditional classified ad model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-listings

  2. CV Search (e.g. the new-fangled and IMO vastly superior dating model) http://careers.stackoverflow.com/employer/about-search

  3. Traditional, but respectful (e.g. no animation or flash or pop-anything) display advertising on SO, SF, and to a lesser extent SU. http://stackexchange.com/about/contact

E.g. Stack Overflow attracts developers, who then also discover Careers. Careers collects their CVs (by making you happy about not being contacted by recruiters all the time and because you can show off your Stack Overflow profile there), then sells access to those CVs to companies looking for developers. Those companies also can pro-actively place jobs on Careers and advertise those jobs on Stack Overflow, where all the great developers hang out. Oh, and they do a few general non-flashy, non-trashy traditional ads for the developers too.

You may want to read the Stack Exchange blog; they posted an interesting overview of how the Stack Exchange business model evolved when the company received $40 million from investors.

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