Jon Ericson Profile picture
Jan 19, 2020 14 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Something has been gnawing at me all week and I can finally put it into the form of a question today: Why wasn't there a communications plan for when Shog and Robert were let go? Two beloved employees (including employee #5) leaving the company and nothing to explain it?
Maybe there was a communications plan that I was not aware of, but it seems to me an answer to a user question on Meta and especially this answer is rather anemic.

meta.stackexchange.com/a/342045/1438
By the way, Juan has been treated rather unfairly since he stepped into his current position. He's a good person in a bad circumstance. (See below.)
It occurs to me that the company controlled the timing of the action, but didn't bother to control the narrative. Maybe there are forces I don't know about that require people in the company to act with more haste than is wise. Maybe.
Then it occured to me that the communications plan for my departure, which leadership knew about for more than two weeks, was also surprisingly ill-prepared. Although other people were supposed to be involved, it was basically Juan and I working without direction from outside.
I wrote my own farewell post, Juan made a couple of small suggestions and that was it. Other than the two of us, I don't know if anyone thought much about how to position this with the community. It was a nice change of pace, actually.
I suspect part of the reason is that ever since the 2017 layoffs, the company has solidified its policy not to discuss departures publicly. For many reasons, that's a good policy in general, so I'm not saying Stack Overflow ought to air dirty laundry.

meta.stackexchange.com/a/303006/1438
I also suspect our departure was not considered particularly momentous to people within the company who are tasked with communication. It was not unusual for a tweet to be flagged and for the people triaging such things to point to the small number of followers and ignore.
Meta users and moderators will obviously notice, but they make up a tiny percentage of all Stack Overflow users. I think the calculation was made that most everyone else on the site wouldn't particularly care. And that logic, I think, sound.
And then I got to thinking how communications plans were created within the company. Lately the focus has been on blockbuster blog posts, social media and podcasts. These are high impact (by the numbers) communications.
In other words, mass communication. I'm not in marketing, but that makes quite a bit of sense. Focus on messages and mediums that reach a lot of people.
Meanwhile, everything I've learned about community management tells me the important communication focuses on important relationships. I'm looking for leaders within the community to connect with so that when I need to communicate something, I know who should hear it.
That sort of communication is a lot more work. I frequently need to tell several small groups of people similar, but not quite the same, messages. It's a pain, but I want to honor our relationship and personalize what I have to say.
Anyway, I'm no closer to an answer to my question. If you've read this far, I urge you to consider the fundamental attribution error. The person you are frustrated with is probably motivated by their bad situation rather than bad character.

medium.com/accelerated-in…

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More from @jlericson

Nov 30, 2022
I've been looking around at a Twitter replacement and here's a thread about Mastodon. Also on how companies can succeed using the same technique some comedians use to succeed despite not having the best jokes.
The technique is called "committing to the bit" and it's what happens with a comedian continues doing something until either they run out of time or people laugh at it.
It's how memes work. The first time you see one, it's clever. The second time, it's derivative. The third time you are in on the joke and it's funny even if it's stupid.

The result can be a random video getting over a billion views.

Read 20 tweets
Jul 27, 2021
This is a problem and we talked about it kinda a lot when I was a @StackOverflow employee. It's a shame we didn't do anything then because the longer it takes to address the problem, the harder it will be to solve.
It might help to clarify why this happens. Stack Overflow (and Stack Exchange) have a concept of individual ownership of posts (they give you reputation, they have your name attached, you get notified when someone comments or edits) and community ownership.
So if someone asked in 2012 a question about a technology that has been updated many times, how do you update the answers? Write a new answer based on the current state of the technology? Edit an existing answer? Ask a new question? None are ideal.
Read 16 tweets
Jul 26, 2021
Last week there were three separate remote meetings at work that started well before I normally wake up. (East-coast bias. ;-) Since they were organized by different people, I got a a good idea of what works and what is less optimal for people working in distant timezones. 🧵
1. If you don't need feedback during the meeting (or can take asynchronous comments), be sure to record the meeting and let people know beforehand that the recording will exist. That way participants can decide whether or not to set their alarm.
(Trust me, I will get more out of the meeting if I can consume it after I've had some coffee.) ☕️
Read 9 tweets
Jun 24, 2021
I haven't looked too deeply into Collectives™ yet, but I think I can fill in some history.

As an aside, I kinda dig adding the ™ symbol to the product name. It mean everyone has to find the way to generate that glyph on their machine. Since I have, I am superior. ;-)
So the problem of how to slice off parts of SO to meet the needs of tech companies goes back to _at least_ to facebook.stackoverflow.com. (That link still works. Actually it works better than the original concept did!)
A more successful model is tag sponsorships. It's now an advertising product (see page 22) that serves similar needs as display ads and sponsoring the podcast. Notice companies can also sponsor blog posts which might be written by SO or the client.

info.stackoverflowsolutions.com/rs/719-EMH-566…
Read 22 tweets
Jun 5, 2021
I used to write a blog detailing my investments. I haven't added anything to it in over a decade because I've shifted to being a passive investor.

But the recent sale of Stack Overflow to Prosus got me thinking about adding a new stock.

4of2.blogspot.com
Now I happen to think Prosus overpaid for Stack Overflow. Not by an irresponsible amount and I think it's probably justified by the strength of the SO brand. As we will see, this is a tiny sliver of the company's value.

prosus.com/news/prosus-to…
So the news is more of a catalyst than a reason to invest. According to Wikipedia, Prosus is less than two years old. It's based in Amsterdam and traded on the Euronext Amsterdam stock market. It's a holding company of many internet service companies.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosus
Read 27 tweets
Oct 7, 2020
I've talked with people who argue that they should be allowed to have the sort of conversations that might offend people because if someone is offended, they don't have to be part of it. It's a seductive idea, but it won't work.

meta.stackoverflow.com/a/311548/1438
Why? Because there's a ratcheting effect. If you could measure rudeness, a chat might start at 1. People who don't care for that level will leave. So now the chat can start moving toward rudeness level 2 with fewer people to object or moderate. Image
Where is the limit? Well it will trend toward the comfort level of the most committed members. If part of the "value" of a chat is that it's "honest" (read "rude"), people who don't value that will leave. Problem solved? No! The next level will offend another set of people.
Read 9 tweets

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