It's been a question on the Joel Test for over 15 years, and Joel believes in it so strongly that a recent GeekWire article began:
If you want to attract and keep developers, don’t emphasize ping-pong tables, lounges, fire pits and chocolate fountains. Give them private offices or let them work from home, because uninterrupted time to concentrate is the most important and scarcest commodity.
That’s the view of Joel Spolsky, CEO of Stack Overflow, a popular Q&A site for programmers, who spoke this morning at the GeekWire Summit in Seattle.
And yet, when I search Stack Overflow Jobs in a major tech city, "ping pong" turns up more hits than "private office" (zero). There was a time when companies posted their Joel Test scores, and listed the parts they failed, but searching for "joel test" also returns 0 hits today.
I don't care about ping pong. I don't even care if I'm writing Python or Ruby, or C++, or 6502 assembly language. Getting a quiet place to work is the #1 top priority for me as a developer, and it sounds like the founder of Stack Overflow agrees with me, as does almost every commenter on the GeekWire article.
Why is it 2016 but we still can't filter on the single most important job criterion? I feel like Stack Overflow Jobs is like a dating site that only asks "Do you prefer blondes or brunettes?" That is the wrong question! I may as well just pick randomly. Reading 100 variants of "self-starter, works well with others, and has experience with real production systems" is not at all helpful in letting me discriminate between these companies.
One possible explanation is that there are no jobs in the world which offer private offices for programmers, which seems depressing, but also unlikely. But regardless, if the people behind SO/J agree that this is important, this is the perfect opportunity to use a jobs site to drive an important social change. You could collect actual data on "offer private offices" and "how long a job opening stays active", and tell companies what their open floorplan is costing.