Disclaimer: I am writing this under an anonymous account to protect my identity for personal reasons. I am U.S. based and a 20k+ SO user. If someone from SO would like to contact me to verify, please feel free to do so.
Are we Spoon Fed?
One of the common themes I've seen on SO is the notion of being "spoon-fed". Many people come to SO and expect the community to spoon-feed them answers, without much effort on their own part. We see this time and time again.
With SO heavily promoting Jobs, I suspect applicants are expecting to be spoon-fed their jobs as well. I have no evidence of this. Only second-hand information and hearsay (more on this later).
The Search Begins
About a year ago, I began looking for a new job. The first thing I did was work with a professional writer to update my resume. One of the best $300 I've ever spent. Next, I updated my SO Jobs profile and then set my status to actively looking along with the specific tech stack and locations I was interested.
Within a week I was contacted by several companies ranging from Amazon to small shops. With each prospective employer contacting me, I did my due diligence and either declined to interview with them or accepted the invitation to interview. In either case, I made my decision within 24 hours.
Dream Job?
One company in particular caught my attention; they had everything I was looking for in the next stage of my professional life. Without too many details, the company was a small established company in Europe looking for someone to lead their entire development team and assume the responsibilities of their tech stack. After several interviews and providing a solution to one of their real-world issues, I was invited to a face-to-face meeting with the CEO. I was offered the position. After negotiations, I declined as we could not come to an agreeable compensation package.
To this day I have minor regrets as I would have landed my dream job in my dream country. However, the reality of compensation was a driving force and is something we all must realistically address.
The Search is Suspended
I had already withdrawn my application everywhere else as I knew the European job was what I wanted. Anything less than that was just going to be a let-down. So, I decided to take a personal-reset and resume the job search once my current job had wrapped up its major release.
The Search Resumes
Fast forward to these past few months where I ramped up my job search. Once again, I turned to SO Jobs. This time I inverted the process and actively looked-for companies I wanted to work with based on their tech stack, location, and other publicly available information.
Within a month, I had narrowed my search down to four companies and began the application process. One simply did not respond. Another outright rejected me. The other two invited me to an interview. Of the two companies that invited me, they were my top two choices and were the best match for my skillset and desired working conditions.
Offers are Received
After going through both interview processes (multiple interviews and coding exercises), I was offered a position at each company. The offers were generous, well exceeding a base salary of $125k, a signing-bonus, plus yearly bonuses, plus equity, and the usual benefits. After additional negotiation and weighing the pros and cons of each offer and company culture, I made my decision.
Is the Developer Talent Pool Shallow?
I had some candid conversations with both companies about their experience finding developers on SO. The common thread was most of the developers they found through SO were below average and many were outright horrendous. Given 10 applicants, maybe one or two would make the cut for the initial interview after submitting a rather basic coding exercise.
And let's be honest with each other; any developer worth their salt can get a job anywhere. It's not that difficult. The questions will always be: Is this a job I actually want? Does it provide me a compensation package that meets my needs? Will I be provided the opportunities to further my career? Am I good fit in the company culture?
Specific Answers to O.P.
What were their challenges?
When a company openly posts an ad with a $100k+ base salary, there are going to an inordinate number of applicants flooding in from SO. For smaller companies, this influx of applicants can be difficult to manage. Once I understood this, my approach was slight modified to actively follow up and pursue the company rather than play the waiting game. In every case, it paid off.
How soon did they land an interview?
Typically, mutual contact with a company would take upwards of one week; sometimes two. However, after contact had been made, the first interview was almost always within a week. The interview process was always fairly standard with 3-4 rounds of interviewing and a couple of code exercises.
A very rough time-line (all are approximate):
- Two weeks to prepare my resume and update my SO Jobs profile.
- One month (four weeks) searching for companies on SO Jobs.
- One to two weeks to initiate mutual contact with a company.
- Three weeks of interviewing and negotiation before a final offer was received.
- Total: 2 + 4 + 2 + 3 = 11 weeks
Was it any different from other sites?
From my perspective, SO Jobs specifically targets developers. For the most part, companies advertising on SO Jobs are going to be more developer friendly than a standard IT shop. In other words, corporate IT shops where dev is a cost-center are a dime a dozen. Boutique shops focused around their development teams are difficult to find; SO Jobs is one of the few places to find these types of companies.
TL;DR
Finding the right job is a difficult task. Your story will only be as successful as the amount of time and effort you are willing to invest.
Let me put it another way
The purpose of SO Jobs is to be the match-maker. The rest is up to
you.