It's December, which means we're gearing up for our annual developer survey. (Also, hats, but that's another story.) The basic goals remain the same since our first survey in 2010 only with more stakeholders. Initially, the driving factor was advertising. Now we've added Talent, Jobs, Enterprise and marketing teams who want to know you better. As a Community Manager, I look forward to seeing how a broad swath of users view Q&A and, as of this year, Documentation and Developer Stories. In addition, journalists and researchers love our data. So the survey has gotten quite extensive recently.
We estimate that responses to the 2016 survey cost 14.6 years of total developer time. To pay back that cost, it's vital that the survey teach us how to make developers’ lives better. We want to see how we can improve our Q&A and Documentation products so that developers find information they need to do their jobs. We want to learn how to help software engineering become more efficient in the future. We want to know how to match people to jobs where they can make a difference. We want to show ads for products that save projects time and effort. Finally, we want to share our research so that the world outside our industry understands us better.
This year some questions are only asked of a subset of survey takers based on previous responses or randomly assigned groups. That should reduce the average time investment to about 30 minutes. But in order to be sure we are in that range and that our questions work, we'll need a variety of users1 to beta test the survey. That's where you can help us. Testers will take the survey and then answer some questions about the survey. Once that's done, we might ask a few followup questions so that we understand your feedback. At most, testing will take a couple of hours of your time. If this sounds interesting, please sign up! I'm closing signups, since we have plenty of volunteers. Thank you all!
What would you like to learn from the survey?
Last March, we asked for survey questions you'd like us to ask. The current survey draft covers many of those suggestions, including:
- diversity concerns
- work schedules
- developer type
- meeting scheduling
- learning resources
- disabilities
- freetime activities
- browser preferences
- social interaction and learning and
- how you spend your work time.
(We don't have detailed questions about monitors, however.)
Please use the answers below to let us know what we missed. It's more helpful at this stage to explain the knowledge you hope to gain rather than the exact question you'd like to ask. Our most interesting insights are likely to be the result of cross tabulation, which requires careful survey design. Basically, what should be in the 2017 survey results?
1. We are limiting participation in the beta, so not everyone will be invited. Our goal is to get a reasonable cross section of the sorts of users who take the survey.