30

Are questions regarding project management practices on- or off-topic on Stack Overflow?

There are 1,368 unclosed questions with however. There are also a number of project-management-related tags out there:

I want to make sure that I'm not off-base in saying that these questions are off-topic, and/or get some guidance as to how questions with these tags might be on-topic.

Related questions:

I am aware of the existence of Project Management, but also realize that just because something is on-topic elsewhere, doesn't mean it's off-topic here.

4

3 Answers 3

31

It would appear to be off-topic here. The help center says that questions should cover:

  • a specific programming problem, or
  • a software algorithm, or
  • software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
  • a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development

Obviously this is not talking about algorithms, and probably not about tools either. That leaves "a specific programming problem" that must be "practical, answerable", and "unique to software development". But while project management problems can be specific, practical, and answerable, and even occasionally unique to software development, they are not programming problems, so they just don't fit here.

Per duplode's comment, Software Engineering and Project Management seem to be the preferable sites to ask on. As usual, the exact site depends on the exact perspective desired; SE SE is likely to do better at programmer (and former-programmer-promoted-to-manager) perspectives, while PM SE may do a better job at general management perspectives.

2
  • 7
    Actually, I would say that "project management" is never "unique to software development", because any and every project will face the same economic problems all project has: cost, time, quality. That you develop software, doesn't make your problem special.
    – Braiam
    Feb 15, 2017 at 2:20
  • 5
    @Braiam: Meh, just go ahead and -1 because I'm not willing to generalize as sweepingly as some. I'm not going to insist that there definitely are uniquely software PM problems, although I suspect there are; the answer simply assumes that and explains why it doesn't matter anyway. Feb 15, 2017 at 2:24
1

PM.SE should be the place for such questions.

Before downvotes start to fly, give me 2 minutes to explain:

A project manager (as a person) is NOT a must have in every project.

Project management (as a role), on the other hand, is required.

The management of a project encloses activities such as estimation, optimisation, organization.

With that in mind, good developers oftentimes strive to optimise their teams, asking questions on how estimations could be better given, how to plan better release cycles, how to have a more productive team. These are management questions. Agile promotes self managed teams. With self management, emanating from the team.

Being Stack Overflow is a heavy developer-oriented community, I'm aware my answer might not be popular. The purpose of my answer is to have a single place where similar questions should be asked, instead of scattered agile questions on Stack Overflow, Software Engineering and PM.

0

Stack Overflow has a condition that questions that don't fall into it, they are simply outside of the scope:

  • a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development

Stack Overflow is a site dedicated to questions unique to software development. Project managing is never "unique to software development", as any project manager in the software industry will face the same economic problems all project managers have: balancing between cost, time and quality.

Suffixing "for programmers/software developers" doesn't automatically makes the question on topic for SO, and this topic is very broad to limit yourself at only what programmers do.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .