Not quite dang. Not quite unless you see them at play in their native habitats which few will ever travel far enough to do.
Sometimes, you really should pay attention to the folks moving around behind the curtains. We'd like to take a moment to introduce you to a very special product team at Stack Overflow, the one that helps us continue to ensure that all users find and have a great experience along with taking on the responsibility of being that special kind of PM that our Q&A product really needed.
But if that wasn't exciting, we suppose we can offer a condensed version:
tl;dr;
TeamDAG stands for Developer Affinity & Growth. Their primary purpose is to help folks quickly find value in becoming long-term contributors to all parts of Stack Overflow, including Q&A. They're also in charge of making sure Q&A doesn't ever break, and continues to get what it needs over time as a mature product.
We'll touch on some stuff that this team is currently doing aside from their constant testing of all of the things at the end of this post.
What, specifically is this team doing every day?
Have we talked about how big Stack Overflow has gotten lately? It's worth mentioning sometimes that at our scale, some things can be incredibly difficult to measure. Of the five big questions that begin with "W", why becomes pretty interesting to us when we try to figure out why people do, or more specifically don't do, certain things.
Why don't more folks that keep hitting the site from search engines eventually sign up and take on small units of work to help? Why is anonymous feedback so confusing to interpret? What parts of the system make perfect sense to us because we're so used to them, but throw new folks for a total loop?
Team DAG helps us figure this stuff out and optimize it so that the site gets out of its own way of making sure that there are plenty of new folks to fill the holes that veteran users leave when they really slow down in participation. That's super important, and there's work to be done all over the place.
What are they doing for Q&A?
Quite a few of this team's efforts touch Q&A since it is our largest and most mature product, which also makes it chocked full of interesting why-riddles to solve. As DAG touches Q&A quite a bit, it immediately becomes their responsibility to avoid breaking it at all costs.
It's also the DAG team's job to make sure that Q&A gets what it needs, approximately when it needs it, and as it stands against all of the goals that the team is trying to meet.
They also ensure that community requests get scheduled, discussed and many times ultimately status-completed or at least status-deferred if we love an idea but just can't act on it right now.
In short, they're going to help to put the responsiveness back into the mix of the meta and mayhem that can be a big part of actively participating in features and bugs.
Do you have an example of what Q&A "needs"?
I certainly do. The ask question page has not been touched in years and is in desperate need of an overhaul, and we've already gotten underway with some tests and user surveys from folks that asked questions faring both well and poorly.
There will be another post coming out at some point early next week about that project, what we've learned so far, what we're contemplating and we really hope to get more feedback before we go knee deep in a concept.
The idea: If we do a better job communicating what we want in a question to new users through a better user experience with some extra help initially, they'll have a better experience by asking better questions.
Great, but how does knowing all of this help me?
If you see someone mention that they're from the DAG team, you know you'll have a better idea of what their function is within the company, and know that they're here to help especially where user-facing features and testing are concerned.
This should help at least some of you realize more opportunities to jump into discussions, reply to a comment, file an additional bug based on a suggestion, etc.
We're working on being more open and transparent about the moving parts we have working on things, what they're working on, and generally why that's their focus.
Any questions for the team, comments or thoughts in general?
Comment or (preferably) answer below! We're really excited about this team coming together to finally put some serious effort into unraveling some tangled messes that took years to perfect, and finally having a team and PM now officially in charge of Q&A as a product.