What benefits does gaining reputation give you outside of giving you access to basic functions?
3 Answers
Check out Careers 2.0... even though the company that hired me for my most recent role didn't actively use Careers 2.0, they used the answers and reputation I've acquired on Stack Overflow as a criteria in giving me this job. If you manage to get a job interview with someone that actively knows what reputation on Stack Overflow is, you're ahead of the game.
Reputation unlocks different privileges. Up to 20k, you unlock new tools and abilities at certain milestones. For instance, you were able to come to Meta because you gained at least 5 rep.
At higher reps, you gain access to various tools.
- At 500 points, you gain access to a couple of the review queues, namely first post and late answer.
- At 2000, you can edit posts without that going to the review queue.
- At 3000, you gain access to close and reopen votes
- At 10000, you can access other review queues and see deleted posts
Note this isn't a complete list. You can view the complete list on the privileges page.
Other than that, some people just like to gain imaginary internet points.
-
What kind of tools do you get at that high of a reputation? I imagine it would take a very long time to get that high– johnny93Commented Aug 8, 2014 at 20:39
-
@johnny93 I've added a list of highlights. There are others- But these are some of the bigger ones.– KendraCommented Aug 8, 2014 at 20:44
-
1If you write good answers and ask well-researched and well-written questions, you'll hit 500 in no time. You can also edit posts to gain some rep.– KendraCommented Aug 8, 2014 at 20:49
-
1@johnny93: It doesn't have to take very long if you're somewhat active. I joined a little less than 4 months ago, and should reach 10k in another 1-2 months if I continue at the same pace. Commented Aug 8, 2014 at 21:08
-
1
-
@gnat I never knew that. That is... Going to take a long time for me. Oh well- I never needed fancy things anyway. :) But thank you for the lesson!– KendraCommented Aug 8, 2014 at 23:58
-
@RetoKoradi Yeh, it doesn't have to take long if you are a true master of an API, using it every day since it was released 22+ years ago. ;)– NickNoCommented Aug 9, 2014 at 10:13
I, for one, appreciate having a socially acceptable outlet for my tendency toward insufferable pedantry.
8-D
.