I'm actually giving a talk at the MK PM tech meet Up on Monday , so it 
interesting hearing people's thoughts 

Kindest regards 

Rick Deller 
Perl Specialist Recruitment Consultant 



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Today's Topics:

   1. Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers (James Laver)
   2. Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers (Gareth Kirwan)
   3. Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers (Lyle)
   4. Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers (Richard Foley)
   5. Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers (Mark Stringer)
   6. Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers (Aaron Trevena)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Tue, 14 May 2013 07:48:43 +0100
From: James Laver <james.la...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers
To: "London.pm Perl M[ou]ngers" <london.pm@london.pm.org>
Message-ID: <c2889b02-6e90-4ddf-b1db-3cba04c27...@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain;       charset=us-ascii

On 13 May 2013, at 23:27, Kieren Diment <dim...@gmail.com> wrote:

> The management challenges for telecommute jobs are different to those for on 
> site.  But it does increase the pool of potential candidates a lot.   Does 
> anyone have any useful experience about managing mixed on-site/offsite staff?

I managed such a team once. The hard part is time zones, but luckily they all 
agreed to keep UK time (they were pretty nocturnal anyway).

Pick a lightweight ticketing system (I'm currently a huge trello fan) so 
everything is visible to everyone. Assign tickets yourself and don't standup, 
actually have a chat for a few minutes on IM with each team member individually 
and see if they need some help with things. And make yourself available in case 
it happens during the day.

Then the usual thing with in office staff goes - different people respond well 
to different management styles. One worked great if you outlined things and 
left them to it. Another worked brilliant if you broke things down massively 
and kept checking up.

Honestly, it's no harder to manage than in-office staff. And I wouldn't 
hesitate to do it again.

James


------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Tue, 14 May 2013 08:08:40 +0100
From: Gareth Kirwan <g...@thermeon.com>
Subject: Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers
To: "London.pm Perl M[ou]ngers" <london.pm@london.pm.org>
Message-ID: <5191e2f8.4010...@thermeon.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed


On 13-05-13 10:48 PM, Mark Fowler wrote:
> On Monday, May 13, 2013, Duncan Garland wrote:
>> We're advertising for a Perl programmer again, and once again we are 
>> struggling.
> The question I ask anyone who has problems hiring for any IT position 
> is "have you considered telecommute?"

We've had a mix of teleworkers and onsite staff, going back over the past 
decade.
Last year I started to consider the issues of hiring good programmers locally, 
and concluded that there isn't really a choice.
So we embraced teleworking completely when hiring new programmers recently.

It's made a world of difference.
The CVs from agents trickled in. I would have thought that meant that the perl 
programmers weren't out there.
But the response to our jobs.perl.org advert was enormous, and very good 
quality indeed.
I'm still open to anything through agents, because if I find "the right 
candidate" then I wouldn't care where they came from.

I'd suggest opening yourself up to telecommuting.
Make sure you actually hire for it as a skill, though. Assuming "You're a good 
dev, you can work from home, surely?" can be disastrous.
Watch for signs of demotivation, and ensure that there's some "telecommuting 
best practices" available.


------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Mon, 13 May 2013 23:18:45 +0100
From: Lyle <webmas...@cosmicperl.com>
Subject: Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers
To: london.pm@london.pm.org
Message-ID: <519166c5.9070...@cosmicperl.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

On 13/05/2013 22:48, Mark Fowler wrote:
> On Monday, May 13, 2013, Duncan Garland wrote:
>
> We're advertising for a Perl programmer again, and once again we are
>> struggling.
>
> The question I ask anyone who has problems hiring for any IT position 
> is "have you considered telecommute?"

Have you considered training graduates? I hear there are a lot of them out of 
work. I see a lot of Perl jobs wanting and expecting nothing less than very 
experienced Perl programmers. If there aren't enough companies willing to give 
fresh programmers the experience, how are they supposed to get there?

If you cut the roots off an apple tree, don't expect to harvest many apples.


Lyle



------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Tue, 14 May 2013 09:34:13 +0200
From: Richard Foley <richard.fo...@rfi.net>
Subject: Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers
To: "London.pm Perl M[ou]ngers" <london.pm@london.pm.org>
Message-ID: <20130514073413.GG8227@thpad>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

One thing to bear in mind is that remote-working does NOT suit everybody.

It's not about lounging around watching TV or mowing the lawn. It is about 
being able to organize your day so ALL your jobs get done, without having the 
hassle of the commute. On the negative side, some people find having their work 
at home means they are unable to separate their work/private time, others miss 
the colleague contact. It's not all roses.

On the plus side, being able to mow the lawn in the time you used to commute is 
a bonus. Working in a (presumably) comfortable environment is nice. Having more 
time to be around your kids, if you have a young family, is a plus too. Having 
a dedicated work room/office space where you can shut the door, if only 
metaphorically, is almost essential for separating work and play though.

And of course, as Dilbert found out after 4 days of remote-working, if you go 
to work naked nobody cares ;)

--
Ciao

Richard Foley

http://www.rfi.net/books.html

On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 08:08:40AM +0100, Gareth Kirwan wrote:
> 
> On 13-05-13 10:48 PM, Mark Fowler wrote:
> >On Monday, May 13, 2013, Duncan Garland wrote:
> >>We're advertising for a Perl programmer again, and once again we are 
> >>struggling.
> >The question I ask anyone who has problems hiring for any IT position 
> >is "have you considered telecommute?"
> 
> We've had a mix of teleworkers and onsite staff, going back over the 
> past decade.
> Last year I started to consider the issues of hiring good programmers 
> locally, and concluded that there isn't really a choice.
> So we embraced teleworking completely when hiring new programmers recently.
> 
> It's made a world of difference.
> The CVs from agents trickled in. I would have thought that meant that 
> the perl programmers weren't out there.
> But the response to our jobs.perl.org advert was enormous, and very 
> good quality indeed.
> I'm still open to anything through agents, because if I find "the 
> right candidate" then I wouldn't care where they came from.
> 
> I'd suggest opening yourself up to telecommuting.
> Make sure you actually hire for it as a skill, though. Assuming 
> "You're a good dev, you can work from home, surely?" can be 
> disastrous.
> Watch for signs of demotivation, and ensure that there's some 
> "telecommuting best practices" available.


------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Tue, 14 May 2013 10:18:15 +0100
From: Mark Stringer <m...@repixl.com>
Subject: Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers
To: london.pm@london.pm.org
Message-ID: <51920157.4000...@repixl.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

We sent out an Intern Wanted posting to heads of careers departments at various 
colleges and Unis. This was filtered through to the students and we had a 
number of promising looking applicants contact us. We're a startup, no track 
record, tiny budget, no benefits and all we had to our credit was wfh and 
flexitime. We had an intern signed in 4 days, and our pick from a number of 
decent looking ones.

Sure, we're having to train him up a bit, but overall he's proving beneficial.

With a decent sized budget for a full time employee, I'd have thought it'd be 
easy to get a high standard of applicant. They may not be experienced in Perl, 
but some experienced developers are willing to cross-train IME.

Also worth pointing out that now is about the best time to be finding 
Uni/College leavers... they're all wondering what they're going to be doing 
come June/July.

As for wfh, I've done it for about 10 years now. One previous employer operated 
solely on this basis. Staff turnover was minimal. It occasionally didn't work 
out due to distractions/it not being a suitable environment for some, but by 
and large, it seems to work IME.

Cheers

Mark

On 05/13/2013 10:22 PM, Duncan Garland wrote:
> Hi,
>
>   
>
> We're advertising for a Perl programmer again, and once again we are 
> struggling. It's a shame because we've got quite a lot of development 
> work in the offing, mostly using Catalyst, DBIx::Class, Moose and the like.
>
>   
>
> I spoke to the agent today and asked why so few people are coming forward.
> His view was that there aren't many Perl vacancies about at the 
> moment, and even fewer people are interested in them.
>
>   
>
> What are other companies doing about this?
>
>   
>
> We've got several PHP projects on the go as well. It's easier to get 
> local PHP programmers and when we can't, there seems to be a constant 
> supply of good Eastern European programmers. Why isn't there the same 
> stream of Eastern European Perl programmers?
>
>   
>
> A second possibility is to cross-train experienced programmers from 
> other languages into Perl. However, Perl has got itself such a 
> reputation for being difficult to learn that the CTO winces whenever I 
> suggest the idea.
> How have other companies got on when they've said that they will take 
> experience in Python/Django or Ruby/Rails or whatever in lieu of 
> experience in Perl/Catalyst? Was anybody interested and did they succeed?
>
>   
>
> The third possibility is just to move some of the projects ear-marked 
> for Perl into the PHP camp. I don't really believe that they can't be 
> done in PHP, but it's a pity because they sit nicely with similar 
> successful projects we've done in Perl. (A Catalyst-based system of 
> ours won an industry-wide prize for "Best Digital Initiative" a couple 
> of months ago.)
>
>   
>
> All the best.
>
>   
>
> Duncan
>
>   
>
>   
>



------------------------------

Message: 6
Date: Tue, 14 May 2013 11:29:44 +0100
From: Aaron Trevena <aaron.trev...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Alternative sources of Perl programmers
To: "London.pm Perl M[ou]ngers" <london.pm@london.pm.org>
Message-ID:
        <cajwq4v3gzicgqq_4aqbtj7-yd4rewjr5s4mrjutjsmmsxfr...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

On 13 May 2013 22:22, Duncan Garland <duncan.garl...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
> We're advertising for a Perl programmer again, and once again we are 
> struggling. It's a shame because we've got quite a lot of development 
> work in the offing, mostly using Catalyst, DBIx::Class, Moose and the like.

That's a good start but not much to go on...

Where and how are you advertising?

What sort of role is it, and how does the salary (presumably you're advertising 
a salary range) stack up against the market for your industry/area?

> I spoke to the agent today and asked why so few people are coming forward.
> His view was that there aren't many Perl vacancies about at the 
> moment, and even fewer people are interested in them.


The agent is talking bollocks, find another - some actually specialise in Perl 
so they must be confident that there are both enough candidates and vacancies 
to make a living from. The number of perl vacancies and developers are both 
increasing based on all the data available.

> What are other companies doing about this?

Lots of different things, telecommute, offering salaries that match or beat 
what you'd get with the same experience with Java, offering flexitime and other 
decent benefit packages that make it worth taking the job and sticking with it.

> We've got several PHP projects on the go as well. It's easier to get 
> local PHP programmers and when we can't, there seems to be a constant 
> supply of good Eastern European programmers. Why isn't there the same 
> stream of Eastern European Perl programmers?

I've never found that a problem myself - both my current and previous employers 
have recruited developers from eastern europe, they're not
10 a penny, but good developers aren't 10 a penny for any tech in any country.


> A second possibility is to cross-train experienced programmers from 
> other languages into Perl. However, Perl has got itself such a 
> reputation for being difficult to learn that the CTO winces whenever I 
> suggest the idea.

At headforwards we've cross-trained maybe a quarter of the development team 
from C++ and other tech, it was very successful, to the point where some have 
been promoted into very senior roles within 2 years.

That was without formal perl training - of which there is plenty available like 
Dave Cross' courses and perl academy.

> How have other companies got on when they've said that they will take 
> experience in Python/Django or Ruby/Rails or whatever in lieu of 
> experience in Perl/Catalyst? Was anybody interested and did they succeed?

That should work fine, the only problem I can forsee is the problem widely seen 
with python developers with a big chip on their shoulders about perl, they can 
and should be weeded out at interviews tho.

I don't believe you've linked to the ad yet, I'm guessing you've already 
advertised on jobs.perl.org, and your local LUG.

Other places you can use social networking to advertise are twitter (I got my 
current job via a twitter tip), coderwall (which is a really nice way to 
showcase your company and team), by sending your team to conferences and 
workshops to talk about your projects (a 5 second "oh, and we're hiring" at the 
end is usually acceptable, at least from what I've seen).

You can also look at your recruitment process and advertising copy itself - 
does your ad stand out, does it meet the basic criteria of what a developer 
needs or wants to know (pay, location, will this company be in business in 18 
months or fold, will I learn or work with new things, is there a career 
path/training/etc, is there a package as a whole including benefits, working 
hours, holiday, etc that will give me a better quality of life, etc)

Hiring perl developers isn't *that* difficult, we've managed to recruit a large 
number over the last 2 years - despite our office location in Cornwall (which 
is also a selling point but to a much smaller pool of people), and despite all 
roles being on-site.

Cheers,

A

--
Aaron J Trevena, BSc Hons
http://www.aarontrevena.co.uk
LAMP System Integration, Development and Consulting


------------------------------

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