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I don't know how to express this in a positive way, and I want to, but, the Teams feature is more and more looking like a solution in search of a problem; the "we built a thing, please tell us what features you want, our developers have free time" is a creative product management approach.

The 5 largest Teams (by membership)5 largest Teams (by membership) consist of 4 companies using it for marketing purposes and the SOPython "community" groupSOPython "community" group that was created because we (your tireless SOPythonSOPython tag/chat janitors), had concerns that the permissions model allows an arbitrary user to change the publicly-displayed content on the Teams pages.

If I was a company looking to hire and I wanted to say "look at the brilliant dudes/dudettes that you'd be working with," then I could maybe see the point of creating a Team. But that said, if I was a company that wanted to create a Team page, I would have already created a Company page. Which means that I'd be creating a Team page to squat the namespace to protect my company image (e.g. someone grabbing team/RedHat and then using that platform to talk about business models that are vampiric on the open-source community). Hooray.

Where the Teams feature is open for both businesses and user-groups, I have to ask: was this created in mind as a platform to support recruiting and marketing? Was some market-testing done and you found people would pay for this? Teams as a "hello fellow developer" company-image platform with a side of passive candidate lead-generation makes sense. If this is a monetization thing that you need to support the core Q/A economy, I'll get it -- it's just you and me here, you can tell me.

If teams is here to stay, due to sunk cost or because it's an executive's favorite pet, my suggestion would be linking Company and Team pages. There's a lot of overlap anyway (showcasing/marketing open source contributions, achievements of team members, suggestion of expertise) and it would solve some of your content-problems.

I don't know how to express this in a positive way, and I want to, but, the Teams feature is more and more looking like a solution in search of a problem; the "we built a thing, please tell us what features you want, our developers have free time" is a creative product management approach.

The 5 largest Teams (by membership) consist of 4 companies using it for marketing purposes and the SOPython "community" group that was created because we (your tireless SOPython tag/chat janitors), had concerns that the permissions model allows an arbitrary user to change the publicly-displayed content on the Teams pages.

If I was a company looking to hire and I wanted to say "look at the brilliant dudes/dudettes that you'd be working with," then I could maybe see the point of creating a Team. But that said, if I was a company that wanted to create a Team page, I would have already created a Company page. Which means that I'd be creating a Team page to squat the namespace to protect my company image (e.g. someone grabbing team/RedHat and then using that platform to talk about business models that are vampiric on the open-source community). Hooray.

Where the Teams feature is open for both businesses and user-groups, I have to ask: was this created in mind as a platform to support recruiting and marketing? Was some market-testing done and you found people would pay for this? Teams as a "hello fellow developer" company-image platform with a side of passive candidate lead-generation makes sense. If this is a monetization thing that you need to support the core Q/A economy, I'll get it -- it's just you and me here, you can tell me.

If teams is here to stay, due to sunk cost or because it's an executive's favorite pet, my suggestion would be linking Company and Team pages. There's a lot of overlap anyway (showcasing/marketing open source contributions, achievements of team members, suggestion of expertise) and it would solve some of your content-problems.

I don't know how to express this in a positive way, and I want to, but, the Teams feature is more and more looking like a solution in search of a problem; the "we built a thing, please tell us what features you want, our developers have free time" is a creative product management approach.

The 5 largest Teams (by membership) consist of 4 companies using it for marketing purposes and the SOPython "community" group that was created because we (your tireless SOPython tag/chat janitors), had concerns that the permissions model allows an arbitrary user to change the publicly-displayed content on the Teams pages.

If I was a company looking to hire and I wanted to say "look at the brilliant dudes/dudettes that you'd be working with," then I could maybe see the point of creating a Team. But that said, if I was a company that wanted to create a Team page, I would have already created a Company page. Which means that I'd be creating a Team page to squat the namespace to protect my company image (e.g. someone grabbing team/RedHat and then using that platform to talk about business models that are vampiric on the open-source community). Hooray.

Where the Teams feature is open for both businesses and user-groups, I have to ask: was this created in mind as a platform to support recruiting and marketing? Was some market-testing done and you found people would pay for this? Teams as a "hello fellow developer" company-image platform with a side of passive candidate lead-generation makes sense. If this is a monetization thing that you need to support the core Q/A economy, I'll get it -- it's just you and me here, you can tell me.

If teams is here to stay, due to sunk cost or because it's an executive's favorite pet, my suggestion would be linking Company and Team pages. There's a lot of overlap anyway (showcasing/marketing open source contributions, achievements of team members, suggestion of expertise) and it would solve some of your content-problems.

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user559633
user559633

I don't know how to express this in a positive way, and I want to, but, the Teams feature is more and more looking like a solution in search of a problem; the "we built a thing, please tell us what features you want, our developers have free time" is a creative product management approach.

The 5 largest Teams (by membership) consist of 4 companies using it for marketing purposes and the SOPython "community" group that was created because we, (your tireless SOPython tag/chat janitors), had concerns that the permissions model allows an arbitrary user to change the publicly-displayed content on the Teams pages.

If I was a company looking to hire and I wanted to say "look at the brilliant dudes/dudettes that you'd be working with," then I could maybe see the point of creating a Team. But that said, if I was a company that wanted to create a Team page, I would have already created a Company page. Which means that I'd be creating a Team page to squat the namespace to protect my company image (e.g. someone grabbing team/RedHat and then using that platform to talk about business models that are vampiric on the open-source community). Hooray.

Where the Teams feature is open for both businesses and user-groups, I have to ask: was this created in mind as a platform to support recruiting and marketing? Was some market-testing done and you found people would pay for this? Teams as a "hello fellow developer" company-image platform with a side of passive candidate lead-generation makes sense. If this is a monetization thing that you need to support the core Q/A economy, I'll get it -- it's just you and me here, you can tell me.

If teams is here to stay, due to sunk cost or because it's an executive's favorite pet, my suggestion would be linking Company and Team pages. There's a lot of overlap anyway (showcasing/marketing open source contributions, achievements of team members, suggestion of expertise) and it would solve some of your content-problems.

I don't know how to express this in a positive way, and I want to, but, the Teams feature is more and more looking like a solution in search of a problem; the "we built a thing, please tell us what features you want, our developers have free time" is a creative product management approach.

The 5 largest Teams (by membership) consist of 4 companies using it for marketing purposes and the SOPython "community" group that was created because we, (your tireless SOPython tag/chat janitors) had concerns that the permissions model allows an arbitrary user to change the publicly-displayed content on the Teams pages.

If I was a company looking to hire and I wanted to say "look at the brilliant dudes/dudettes that you'd be working with," then I could maybe see the point of creating a Team. But that said, if I was a company that wanted to create a Team page, I would have already created a Company page. Which means that I'd be creating a Team page to squat the namespace to protect my company image (e.g. someone grabbing team/RedHat and then using that platform to talk about business models that are vampiric on the open-source community). Hooray.

Where the Teams feature is open for both businesses and user-groups, I have to ask: was this created in mind as a platform to support recruiting and marketing? Was some market-testing done and you found people would pay for this? Teams as a "hello fellow developer" company-image platform with a side of passive candidate lead-generation makes sense. If this is a monetization thing that you need to support the core Q/A economy, I'll get it -- it's just you and me here, you can tell me.

If teams is here to stay, due to sunk cost or because it's an executive's favorite pet, my suggestion would be linking Company and Team pages. There's a lot of overlap anyway (showcasing/marketing open source contributions, achievements of team members, suggestion of expertise) and it would solve some of your content-problems.

I don't know how to express this in a positive way, and I want to, but, the Teams feature is more and more looking like a solution in search of a problem; the "we built a thing, please tell us what features you want, our developers have free time" is a creative product management approach.

The 5 largest Teams (by membership) consist of 4 companies using it for marketing purposes and the SOPython "community" group that was created because we (your tireless SOPython tag/chat janitors), had concerns that the permissions model allows an arbitrary user to change the publicly-displayed content on the Teams pages.

If I was a company looking to hire and I wanted to say "look at the brilliant dudes/dudettes that you'd be working with," then I could maybe see the point of creating a Team. But that said, if I was a company that wanted to create a Team page, I would have already created a Company page. Which means that I'd be creating a Team page to squat the namespace to protect my company image (e.g. someone grabbing team/RedHat and then using that platform to talk about business models that are vampiric on the open-source community). Hooray.

Where the Teams feature is open for both businesses and user-groups, I have to ask: was this created in mind as a platform to support recruiting and marketing? Was some market-testing done and you found people would pay for this? Teams as a "hello fellow developer" company-image platform with a side of passive candidate lead-generation makes sense. If this is a monetization thing that you need to support the core Q/A economy, I'll get it -- it's just you and me here, you can tell me.

If teams is here to stay, due to sunk cost or because it's an executive's favorite pet, my suggestion would be linking Company and Team pages. There's a lot of overlap anyway (showcasing/marketing open source contributions, achievements of team members, suggestion of expertise) and it would solve some of your content-problems.

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user559633
user559633

I don't know how to express this in a positive way, and I want to, but, the Teams feature is more and more looking like a solution in search of a problem; the "we built a thing, please tell us what features you want, our developers have free time" is a creative product management approach.

The 5 largest Teams (by membership) consist of 4 companies using it for marketing purposes and the SOPython "community" group that was created because we, (your tireless SOPython tag/chat janitors) had concerns that the permissions model allows an arbitrary user to change the publicly-displayed content on the Teams pages.

If I was a company looking to hire and I wanted to say "look at the brilliant dudes/dudettes that you'd be working with," then I could maybe see the point of creating a Team. But that said, if I was a company that wanted to create a Team page, I would have already created a Company page. Which means that I'd be creating a Team page to squat the namespace to protect my company image (e.g. someone grabbing team/RedHat and then using that platform to talk about business models that are vampiric on the open-source community). Hooray.

Where the Teams feature is open for both businesses and user-groups, I have to ask: was this created in mind as a platform to support recruiting and marketing? Was some market-testing done and you found people would pay for this? Teams as a "hello fellow developer" company-image platform with a side of passive candidate lead-generation makes sense. If this is a monetization thing that you need to support the core Q/A economy, I'll get it -- it's just you and me here, you can tell me.

If teams is here to stay, due to sunk cost or because it's an executive's favorite pet, my suggestion would be linking Company and Team pages. There's a lot of overlap anyway (showcasing/marketing open source contributions, achievements of team members, suggestion of expertise) and it would solve some of your content-problems.