TL;DR:
Yes. We currently ship approximately ten smaller features per month for Q&A (mostly comprised of outstanding feature requests that a developer can do in about 1.5 days), but we need to hire a product manager for Q&A before we can take on larger projects.
Now, the answer that I promised would be shorter than The Iliad:
When I was hired at Stack Overflow, there were fewer than 100 people working here. We planned larger projects well in advance, but most new features that got the kind of visibility that comes from many people using them every single day usually started with someone getting inspired by something on Meta, grabbing a developer, and then just building it. Writing a spec mostly meant writing a meta post and adjusting plans based on feedback.
Over 300 people work here now, which means that the number of people that have a stake in changes or additions that we make to any product has gone up considerably. As fun as it was waking up in the morning and saying I think we should find something to ship today — cracks were really beginning to show in our development process. No one quite knew what everyone was doing, which means we didn't always know what we'd need to support them, or what we might be making more difficult for ourselves down the road.
To fix this, we shifted our development structure into product oriented teams. Each team has at least one product manager, several developers, a designer, liaisons from marketing and community growth, and possibly liaisons from other product teams if things need to fit tightly together. This fixes a lot of stuff that was going wrong:
- Now, there's always at least one person that knows what's going on with every single product that we have in very minute detail.
- Every other team in the company stays informed on what's happening, and is able to give critical information early enough to avoid mistakes
- We're finally paying down instead of continuing to accumulate technical debt
- We can estimate time complexity and cost accurately and actually ship on or ahead of schedule, which is critical when you have business goals that you simply have to meet
Q&A, as a product, currently really needs a PM (wink, wink, anyone?) to push bigger ideas through to new features. Someone needs to own them, to make sure that we don't invest a bit of time in them and then somehow never follow through, and to make sure that we bring a much needed sense of consistency to our most mature product.
But we haven't really stopped, despite not having a PM for Q&A
Something that we're historically kind of bad at doing is communicating the stuff we're doing frequently and consistently. Had we been doing a better job at that, everyone would know that we implement around ten feature requests from around the network every month.
Our operations team, who handles scheduling this stuff with developers, will begin putting out regular updates of what we've been doing which also gives you folks a chance to give some feedback. You can find these updates here.
We select things that we think can make the most people happy, and can also be done in about one to three days by a developer. Or, in other words, something relatively self-contained that doesn't require an elaborate spec, corroboration with many other teams, and doesn't really alter the product itself in any major way.
As I said, Q&A is already very mature product, with a very mature code base
I don't think we'll ever say that we've done all that we can do with Q&A as a product, but the truly meaningful stuff that we can currently identify is really complicated to pull off. Ever worked on a really mature code base? Those things have corners where light hasn't shined in years.
But there are things that have gained momentum (and an appreciable amount of work put into them) such as overhauling the ask question page to help new users better understand what we need from them.
Some rather visible tests on that will be happening around a month from now; this is something we're being rather careful with because it's so incredibly easy to test it the wrong way.
Other stuff supports Q&A
In a business sense and a figurative one. Q&A is always going to be the thing that made us, and set the standard for the level of innovation and quality we put into everything else. And while we monetize Q&A very effectively, well .. eggs and a single basket and stuff.
The work we do on Jobs, and other things we might do in the future helps us continue to grow, and helps us to invest in really hard problems that once solved can make Q&A significantly better, but not really add much to the balance sheets.
What else can I tell you?
I really do want to know. I've been reticent to post a whole lot of blue sky ideas that I've had rattling around and even done some work on because I didn't want to set anyone's expectations incorrectly - none of this stuff can actually get underway until we get a product team for Q&A put back together and they get firmly confident with everything they need to own. But would knowing the stuff we're thinking about now, even with the addendum that it's not going to fly any time soon, help?
Would you appreciate more posts from us that just talk about something that we learned, or something that we're only at this point toying with, and is there a way we can make room for those here on meta?
The first issue that I think we need to fix is that we need to do a better job of communicating, and that starts with identifying the times when we should be doing it.
Because we can't let stuff like this fester and then boil over. And while you boil very politely, I don't really feel good about the fact that you did :)
Ask what you want, I'll be as open as I possibly can.
Did I mention that we're hiring a PM?
status-declined
it pissed me off to no end that no one official even took the time to respond to the question and explain why it wouldn't be implemented. Still harboring kind of a grudge over that.You do have an answer from Shog on your "reward finding duplicates" suggestion
yup - that's why I cleverly added "in charge". :P The idea was Shog's originally (I just wrote it out as a feature request) but it doesn't seem to have found any traction within the company.