tl;dr
We'll be using stackoverflow.co as our main domain name for marketing activities - all products on stackoverflow.com will stay the same. We'll start transitioning today with /company, and the product marketing pages and other supporting services over the coming weeks.
We're doing some housekeeping with our domain names (we're obsessed). Starting today (Feb 10th 2022) you will see stackoverflow.co being used to replace the following:
Company pages
stackoverflow.com/company
Where you can learn more about the company behind Stack Overflow & Stack Exchange Network, including our internal job listings and press pages.
Product marketing pages
stackoverflow.com/teams, /collectives-on-stack-overflow, etc.
Where you can learn about Stack Overflow for Teams and our other business products. The products themselves will remain where they are in stackoverflow.com.
Resources, campaigns & promotional email
stackoverflowsolutions.com, info.stackoverflowsolutions.com
Where customers and potential customers can learn in-depth about some of our product fundamentals and features.
Although in terms of business structure this makes sense, behind the scenes the first two sets of pages are actually built from the same questions and answers application monolith that you're reading now.
We're breaking up with the monolith
Long time readers will note we've shuffled these around a few times. In late 2019 we moved Talent and Advertising over to stackoverflow.com from stackoverflowbusiness.com - the main factors at the time being:
- Brand consistency & authority, keeping everyone in one domain.
- We wanted to avoid confusion with the Business plan of Teams.
- SEO benefits from stackoverflow.com being a high ranked domain.
- Desire to move away from legacy marketing tools.
- Tech limitations making it much quicker to create static sites in our current stack.
- Lack of resources for anything too complex (e.g., custom content management system, etc.) in the time allowed.
A lot has changed since then and now it felt time to reevaluate how this very stable, but very manual process worked.
We also looked at what others were doing (e.g., our friends at Reddit have redditinc.com for a similar purpose) and decided from a brand perspective it is an acceptable trade-off to move these pages somewhere else. In addition, there were a few more practical factors:
- Marketing pages don't make sense in the same codebase as the main site anymore. We're taking up engineering cycles that could be better spent improving the product.
- Faster pace of work than historically needed—content & design tweaks happen almost daily as we optimize and launch new features.
- Future desire for a content management system (CMS) to allow internal teams to update the site in near real-time (e.g., adding press releases). We didn't want to build this into the monolith, and again it doesn't make sense to have engineers update text on webpages.
- Security: user data, site integrity and stability could be affected by non-critical pages and services. There's also no need to know who's logged-in on these pages.
A full list of pages that are moving to the new domain
stackoverflow.com/company
- stackoverflow.com/company/careers
- stackoverflow.com/company/contact
- stackoverflow.com/company/leadership/*
- stackoverflow.com/company/press/*
- stackoverflow.com/company/research
- stackoverflow.com/company/work-here/*
stackoverflow.com/teams
- stackoverflow.com/teams/calculate/*
- stackoverflow.com/teams/customers
- stackoverflow.com/teams/customer-success
- stackoverflow.com/teams/features/*
- stackoverflow.com/teams/integrations
- stackoverflow.com/teams/pricing
- stackoverflow.com/teams/security
- stackoverflow.com/teams/tour
- stackoverflow.com/teams/use-cases/*
stackoverflow.com/advertising
- stackoverflow.com/advertising/audience
- stackoverflow.com/advertising/contact
- stackoverflow.com/advertising/guidelines
- stackoverflow.com/advertising/policies
- stackoverflow.com/advertising/solutions
stackoverflow.com/collectives-on-stack-overflow
- stackoverflow.com/collectives-on-stack-overflow/contact
- stackoverflow.com/collectives-on-stack-overflow/tour
stackoverflow.com/talent
- stackoverflow.com/talent/branding
- stackoverflow.com/talent/contact
- stackoverflow.com/talent/solutions
* tertiary pages omitted
Everything should work smoothly with redirects in place, but as always we appreciate any bug reports as an answer to this post (one bug per answer please).
https://support.stackenterprise.co/register/$randomAlphanumericString
which looks exactly like the hundreds of phishing mails I get (familiar yet different domain; weird alphanumeric link etc.). I had to ask an employee to confirm that this was in fact from you before I would click on it. Even better of course would be to use the official domain for these things so we don't need to be guessing..com
would probably have looked less fishy..io
and.ai
are also good examples of popular exported country code TLDs. As they say, the sun never sets on the British name servers. As far as the popularity of country TLDs after the introduction of private global domains, I think the length is what gives them value (stackoverflow.co
looks better thanstackoverflow.company
). And I think most non-webtech people don't realize popular two-letter TLDs belong to a country anyway, and often get confused by longer TLDs.