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Since a few years I've seen job title names like

  • Javascript Assassin
  • Rails Master
  • PHP Guru
  • Python Ninja
  • Lisp Middle Earth Wizard
  • Perl Golfer

What do you think is the reason for these names? What do employers look for with this type of ad?

And what about the "higher" titles that are definitely used (but never saw them in ads) like

  • Evangelist
  • Distinguished Eng.
  • IBM Fellow (or sth like that)

Related: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/471929/whats-the-coolest-startup-programmer-job-title-closed

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Do you have an actual example of a job advertisement with the title "Perl Golfer"? That would be someone who many would prefer not to employ. – Kinopiko Oct 21 at 0:10
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No, I put that one in there to surprise people – Vinko Vrsalovic Oct 21 at 0:13
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vote to reopen. it's IT job related as many other questions. And the discussion about being serious or not is helpfull. – Peter Kofler Oct 21 at 7:30
answers.onstartups.com/questions/2076/… – Vinko Vrsalovic Oct 21 at 9:31

closed as not programming related by Vinko Vrsalovic, Jonathan Fingland, Jay Riggs, sth, Shog9 Oct 21 at 1:41

7 Answers

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Sounds like flattery in lieu of money to me.

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Yep, usually the companies I've seen pull that are the ones that think that working for them is its own reward. Personally, I'm lured the old-fashioned way: cold hard cash, and good benefits. Let's keep things professional. – Ether Oct 21 at 0:41
At one company, we got m&m candies for working late. Not working late was a career limiting move. Needless to say, I moved on. – Jeremy Oct 21 at 3:39
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The reason for these names is that people who like working with computers are mostly NERDS.

"What do you do?"

"I'm a JavaScript Ninja!"

You just can't get any nerdier than that.

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Either they feel hip and trendy themselves and need to communicate that or they are looking to attract people feeling that way. Or both.

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vote up 2 vote down

Adds a bit of interest to a rather mundane job. Will require a bit of translation to future employers.

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I think they're used to reflect the particular culture of an organisation, and to help small companies differentiate themselves from more formal or corporate workplaces, with a view to attracting candidates who are a good cultural fit and like to work in such an environment.

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Titles like those imply that you are comfortable with your skills. "I know Python, but would I ever consider myself a 'ninja'?"

They also help the candidate infer what sort of environment that they are applying to (ie the sort if place that respects talent vs years of experience). Unfortunately, in the end it comes out sounding like HR-speak.

my favorite, btw, has always been 'king of change' for a change management manager

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vote up 1 vote down

Although I probably wouldn't put these job titles on a resume and would rename them to standart titles because it doesn't look that professional, they're just fun to use in the workplace. Maybe it helps form a little more of a creative corporate culture.

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Are they really used in the workplace? I would have a hard time calling a colleague "hey ninja, can you help me with this?" – Vinko Vrsalovic Oct 21 at 0:07
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I would very much like to ask a colleague that. – Kinopiko Oct 21 at 0:09
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Imagine your client-facing associates telling the client "Let me ask the assassin about that." – Rorschach Oct 21 at 0:18
C: "What the status on the site development?" CFA: "I bet the assassin by now has disemboweled that little guy that was annoying us for months..." – Vinko Vrsalovic Oct 21 at 0:27
Hey I was only speculating as to why a company would have titles like that. Personally I'd be a little embarassed saying "How many Coding mercenaries do we need on this task", or "Lets go ask a sql ninja about that". But to each their own. – Jeremy Oct 21 at 3:37

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