...Let's face facts here, y'all. While we have a moment to, anyway.
I agree with this thinking and ideology, and I as an actual architect (for my day job) also feel the same way. Sharing the pain of an implementation of something is one good way to keep us honest on how well an implementation is going to work, and it's important to keep tabs on the ones which were enlightening and useful, and the ones which blew up in our face.
However, the ultimate reality is that this isn't going to happen.
The reason:
Stack Overflow has grown into a vast and diverse ecosystem of products, and is less of an actual community.
The main thing we seem to go on about here on Meta is the Q&A aspect of the site. Q&A is actually quite straightforward; if you have a question, you ask it here and it gets an answer. You do have to have a good question to ask and you also have to be sure that you supply us with what we feel are reasonable attempts at a solution, or at least something for us to work with. It's surprising how not a lot of askers seem to rise to that level for us, yet feel that it's okay to lash out against the community (as it were) when we take the corrective action we feel needs to happen.
But...the issue now is that you're not going to get a substantial part of the team actually committed to using the site on a daily basis, since, well, that isn't their job. That's not what their domain expertise is in, and they're being asked as part of their actual expertise to do their day jobs.
What was mentioned (as far as titles go) was a project manager, a data team, UX researchers, community managers (CMs), designers, and engineers, and I can see maybe two groups out of that list being committed to the site on a daily basis, similar to how we are. A lot of the other people in that list aren't primary consumers of the kind of site that Stack Overflow is, and frankly - that's not why they were brought on board.
To complicate matters, Stack Overflow has diversified its offerings into several products:
- A platform for people looking for programming jobs to be able to better find them
- A platform to allow for advertising of your goods (mostly on-stream advertisement)
- A place to privately host your own instance of Stack Overflow-style Q&A boards, and
- Most recently, a place to let you do the above but with Stack Overflow handling the infrastructure for you.
At a minimum, the people who are hired to do this probably aren't going to be using Talent/Careers since they're already hired, and they probably aren't going to be looking for another job, so they're not in the context of what it's like to actually use the tool. (Full disclaimer - I've tried myself to use it several times, and the most value I got from it was a company I wished to never, ever talk to again since their interview process was literally a cold call technical screen the following day. (To the team's credit, the feature was delivered about three years after I highlighted the request.)
Now you get into the main issue of development on such a large scale, which is, in essence, a lot of the power features we want or think are high priority aren't as high a priority to the people with the roadmap. They're not going to share our pains since they don't see this in an as critical light as we do. They may say they value it highly, but the milestones we've hit along the way tell the actual tale here.
It's a slow and painful effort to get a product team which doesn't have the same level of investment as the people using the products which they create. We as engineers have created a lot of pieces of work which we probably won't use in our lifetime - for instance, I've worked on an affiliate network-style site (think Squidoo if that means anything to you, but it was definitely not Squidoo), but I would never want to use or do anything like what they're doing, so I wasn't invested in the actual ecosystem. Thankfully, that didn't detract from the job I did or the quality I delivered, since I was able to actually instill great change at that company, and provided incredible utility for me, being fresh out of college.
We like to think that Stack Overflow is different, and that it's a special snowflake in many contexts. It truly is, but that depends on how you look at it. To us, this is a community with a glimmer of hope left that needs more love and support from the Powers that Be. To others, well, somehow, some way, the lights have to stay on, lest our squabbling and frustration be for literally no reason.
This is the paradox we find ourselves in. We are at the mercy and timetable of benevolent dictators (with some apologies to Jon for word choice). They have been truly benevolent, but don't let benevolence mistake anyone's position in this matter. At the end of the day, the decision rests with them to guide the site in a specific direction. Our feedback will absolutely be taken into account and weighed, though.
I found myself in this mindset not long after...well, "the resolution of an incident in which I had to take a break" happened, and I went back to the Anime & Manga Stack Exchange site. I'd been a part of that community for a while as well, and while I definitely feel like I could be more active, I feel like I've contributed quite a bit there too. This is only to run into the circumstance that, we gave them feedback on what we wanted the site to look like, and we didn't get that. The CMs there did promise to do better, but what we'd get is what we'd get, which gets back to the "dictator" piece of this. They were benevolent enough to revisit it, but they have decisions that need to be made. The end result: it's an improvement, but it's still not quite what we asked for, in my head, but it's something that I could be satisfied with.
If nothing else, that little episode on a site with a question-per-day count that would be seen as a rounding error to Stack Overflow is pretty indicative of what's going on in the Stack Exchange Network itself. A lot of people that are responsible for these communities may be a lot more detached from them than anyone really realizes, but at the end of the day, that's not what's going to keep the lights on, or them paid, or any of their key stakeholders happy.
There's really not a good way for us to express our viewpoint on this. The only thing we could realistically do is disappear for a time, and leave the site to its own devices, but the voices we have in the room which actually cared about these kinds of things would slowly start to die down. We want a good site, but we have to have a site first before we can make it good. I'm not a fan of the position we're in either, but I don't see a clean way to fix it.
Not unless you decide to actually apply to be a CM.