[nycphp-talk] job: developers and designers needed
inforequest
sm11szw02 at sneakemail.com
Sat Aug 21 14:40:43 EDT 2004
Chris Shiflett wrote:
>> ...Did you read the email? Seriously, I can't imagine that the
>> "commercial"
>> bit in the charter was intended to address some growing problem with
>> people not knowing we have a separate jobs list. If this were an email
>> from someone using the list as an advertising platform, then I would
>> agree
>> that it is a misuse of the list, and I also think the poster would know
>> that intuitively.
>>
>> Anyway, sorry for being the bad guy, but I felt something needed to be
>> said. I perceived a bit of a "holier than thou" attitude being projected
>> toward someone using us to locate PHP talent, and I don't want to be a
>> part of that. I *want* people to use NYPHP's resources to find PHP
>> talent,
>> and I appreciate those who do. It makes our group stronger and more
>> valuable to the members and to the community.
>>
>> Chris
>>
>> =====
>> Chris Shiflett - http://shiflett.org/
>>
>> PHP Security - O'Reilly
>> Coming Fall 2004
>> HTTP Developer's Handbook - Sams
>> http://httphandbook.org/
>> PHP Community Site
>> http://phpcommunity.org/
>
> ...Letting someone know that we have a jobs list is great, and that's all
Well, I acknowledge that Chris and I tend to disagree on commercialism
of free resources like this talk list.
Back in the late eighties when newsgroups first started getting spammed
by people with 10 line signatures, the general agreement was that 3
lines is enough to sign your post. Anything more is spam. Even though
the Internet is no longer non-commercial, I still agree with that
sentiment. How many lines of hyperlinks to external resources do we
really need on every post to bleed the signal to noise ratio of the
list? Do we need board approval to spam this list in the sig?
I admit I am on the outer edge, but I also don't write off commercial
posts as "job opportunities". Case in point is this one. A job
opportunity post is "I have PHP jobs available. Requirements are A,B,
and C. Click here for more....." A commercial post is "My company does
X and Y, is a leader in the field, is growing and very successful, etc
etc etc and has jobs ".... Most people in the marketing business know
the value of such a post with external links, placed on a quality
PHP-oriented webpage or list, for PR and marketing purposes (in
addition to back-linking and search engine relevance). Internet
marketing 101 espouses the importance of such PR. Wiki-spam, guestbook
spam, blog comment spam.... it's all trying to do the same thing.
My apologies to Michael who posted the original job *advertisement*. I
never doubted his intentions, but he has sparked the discussion so may
feel a bit persecuted. He's also a self-proclaimed SEO person, so I
expect he understands very well the value of such exposure.
Someone has to protect resources that are intended to be free, and
intended to be high signal to noise, and NOT intended to be marketing
vehicles for commercial enterprises (including book authors). I suggest
it get done through a sensitive board of directors and off-line mods,
like Hans K was doing voluntarily with his free time between 3 and 3:30
am or whatever. Do we sell less PHP books? yeah, probably. Do we risk
losing some opportunity to promote PHP via such spam? yeah... but that's
the job of the Board of Directors, isn't it? I bet NYPHP's Board of
Directors will do a wonderful job of approving what is good and limiting
what is questionable, if they are granted that opportunity. I doubt
anyone is more qualified than they are. They provide a jobs list, and
apparently would tolerate a jobs post that didn't appear to take
advantage of the commercial potential of the list.
Now by atempting to prevent over commercialization and spamming of the
list do we lose the participants who make NTPHP's lists such a valuable
resource? I guess that is up to those people, who have to decide for
themselves if participation in the list, sans any direct commercial
benefit, is still worthwhile to them. I couldn't tell you that one. I
highlight, however, that we also risk losing the same people when the
list becomes low signal to noise, or overly spammed. In my experience
the lurking experts are at least as valuable as the high-profile ones,
but sadly they are also the first to leave when the list gets too noisy.
Finally, I am just a participant in NYPHP and this list, like everybody
else. I have no agenda, and don't represent the board of NYPHP or
anything like that. So while I know I am not wrong in my understanding
of how people commercialize these resources, I may be wrong about how
NYPHP desires to handle these issues. Like most of you, I have simply
contributed my piece.
-=john andrews
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