vote up -2 vote down star
1

Scenario:

You are interviewing other people for a project manager job in your own organization. You find out that the person has been a contributor on stackoverflow, submitting both questions and answers. You think it might be helpful to review their posts.

What would you look for, in what order of importance?

flag
Do project managers generally ask and answer programming questions? – DOK Nov 10 '08 at 17:08
Maybe, maybe not. I would hope so. – le dorfier Nov 10 '08 at 17:11
It would be nice if a project manager is technically capable. However, the project manager doesn't have to be an excellent software engineer, just good enough to recognize the potential problems and be able to manage the project effectively. – Franci Penov Nov 10 '08 at 17:17
This looks like an interesting question. It certainly is programming related. So I reopened it. – Mendelt Nov 10 '08 at 17:17
It may be an interesting question. But is certainly not programming related. But then again - confusion between "interesting" and "programming related" is common here on SO. – Tomalak Nov 11 '08 at 11:02

closed as not a real question by blowdart, Yuval A, Neil Butterworth, Juan Manuel, Rex M Jul 18 at 23:56

5 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

• Clear, complete, coherent writing skills. That says a lot about a person's intellect and business capabilities.
• Depth and competence of SO submission content.
• Bonus: Does not come across as a condescending jerk in answers.

link|flag
I especially agree with the attitude point. – le dorfier Nov 10 '08 at 18:32
vote up 1 vote down

of the questions asked, were they thoughtful questions that you would like your project managers to consider, or were they he-should-know-that-as-a-PM questions that scream 'noob' or 'wannabe'?

of the answers given, same criteria!

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

First and foremost, I would ask the interviewee's permission.

Edit: Why?

Because it's polite. No way I would work for an employer who did that without my permission.

link|flag
1  
Why? Stackoverflow participation is in public. There is no expectation of privacy regarding stuff you write here. – MOE37x3 Nov 10 '08 at 18:05
@MOE: If you don't ask how do you know for certain that the person you're looking at is me, and that that account is only used by me? – tloach Nov 10 '08 at 18:27
Good point to discuss. It addresses how transparent the hiring process is, and how transparently the interviewee views their side. – le dorfier Nov 10 '08 at 18:29
I think they have already given their permission by telling them their username. See, this is why it's bad to make it your full name :P – SCdF Nov 10 '08 at 18:49
doofledorfer: "You find out that the person has been a contributor on stackoverflow" in the question is not "The candidate tells you..." – Ali A Nov 10 '08 at 18:59
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

Is a project manager on SO looking to move into programming?

link|flag
Might be meta-interviewing people. :) Or looking for ways to help the people being managed. (Personal bias - good managers are really people-helpers.) Sometimes managers do real work, too. – le dorfier Nov 10 '08 at 17:39
vote up 6 vote down

I would double check what he pretends being is similar to what he looks like through its participation to Stackoverfow.

  • Look at its tags to see where it's compentencies and/or center of interest are : programming, PM or methodologies

  • Look at the questions he asked to find if they match his experience in his resume

  • Look at its answers to determine how clearly he can can express his ideas

link|flag

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.