I may be wrong, but I suspect the idea is to aim high, hoping but not expecting that
somebody will apply who meets all the criteria, and failing that, that we'll get
somebody who meets most of the criteria and could pick up or be trained in the the skills
they need.
Harry
________________________________
From: Thomas Morton <morton.thomas(a)googlemail.com>
To: UK Wikimedia mailing list <wikimediauk-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Sent: Monday, 18 June 2012, 14:51
Subject: Re: [Wikimediauk-l] Recruiting for the Developer
correction: there are even bigger issues
(I said I was in a rush)
Tom
On 18 June 2012 14:49, Thomas Morton <morton.thomas(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
Looking at the job description I have some concerns that it has been written without the
input of someone experienced in hiring individuals for technical or pseudo-technical roles
- especially in the current economic climate.
You seem to be looking for someone extremely versatile, experienced and independent... on
a very entry level salary packet.
I was under the impression, from previous discussions, that the developer position was to
be contractor-style - or at least remote working in the region ~10 hours a week.
As a developer, from the description page, I see the following roles:
* Developer
* Sysadmin
* Project manager
* Advocate
Four very distinct roles.
To pick on one specific issue; expecting this person to work on Mediwiki core, or an
extension, is going to be problematic. That's a whole position on its own and you are
going to find that ongoing "other work" will make project work of that sort
untenable.
(speaking as someone who is in much this position at the moment; my project work is on
hold pretty much all the time whilst clearing up management issues).
I worry that there is not a lot of work described in this job; or at least
the responsibilities are bitty and ill-defined. You're risking having someone who will
sit for long portions of the day drumming their fingers on the desk. (speaking as someone
who was hired to do this once, and quit after 3 months due to boredom). It would be good
to define (internally, on the WMUK wiki) the roles this developer will have
to fulfill and, from a technical perspective, what we'd like to achieve in, say, the
next year.
The salary is most concerning though; you're looking for experience and versatility -
two major technical skills (sysadmin and developer) plus management experience/skill - at
a basic entry level rate. I think you will struggle to find competent applicants.
I'd fit, fairly well, this job description (and I think am pretty good at it) - and
any London based job under £35K would struggle to tempt me. Under £30K is not even worth
considering. (n.b. I'm not saying this because I'd plan to apply if you raised the
salary :)). You;fe
What I recommend is hiring a more general community liaison (we need this anyway IMO),
with experience in technical projects. They can do most of the PM style work. Then
contract out specific projects (yes, including MW extension writing) as and when needed.
Keep a contractor on retainer for sysadmin and internal dev work (~10 hours a week etc.).
Particularly as you have numerous skilled dev/sysadmin contractors within the community
who will likely offer discounted rates. Building on the WMF model; with a competent
project manager most of the dev/sysadmin work could be community driven. I've already
offered to pitch in, but there is no public project to achieve this that I know of.
If we have a budget of £30K to go into development this is not enough to hire a full time
developer/sysadmin/manager. It's enough to contract the work and to begin to build a
volunteer centric development department.
Mike wrote an excellent starter to this
here:
http://uk.wikimedia.org/wiki/2012_Developer_budget The current job description seems
to be the opposite of many of those (good) proposals (although I know Mike also wrote the
job description). If we take the list of upcoming requirements from that page there are
even bigger images; it talks about a robust backup strategy - which is quite a specific
set of experience. Even worse is the security review stuff - no dev/sysadmin you hire for
£25K will be capable of a robust security review.
As always; just my 2p :)
Tom
(sorry to be over-critical, but I am in a rush today so this is first draft sent :))
On 18 June 2012 13:41, Jon Davies <jon.davies(a)wikimedia.org.uk> wrote:
We will shortly be advertising for our developer post. We will be spreading the word far
and wide, especially within the community, but all suggestions gratefully received.
So far (outside leads:
Mozilla
Tech hub
Civi-CRM
Google academy
Thanks
Jon
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