HACKER Q&A
📣 zingar

What could a single company do with 1000 developers hired in a year?


In a recent StackOverflow podcast[1] a guest mentions a conversation with a recruiter who is trying to find 1000 Ruby developers in 2021 for a single client. It was not really discussed, but if anyone has any insight I am very curious:

1. What kind of company/project can benefit from 1000 developers being added to it?

2. What kind of onboarding process could handle 1000 new developers in a year?

3. Are there really a thousand Ruby developers in the world who are likely to change jobs in 2021?

[1]: http://stackoverflow.blog/2021/05/14/podcast-338-why-is-it-so-hard-to-find-ruby-developers/


  👤 davismwfl Accepted Answer ✓
1. I could see this for a services based company, like the old IBM Global Services, or one of the Big 5 consulting firms. I find it hard to understand how adding 1k devs for a product based company makes sense, but doesn't mean I am right.

2. On-boarding can be productized, I've done that a few times for companies where we were hiring rapidly and constantly. I learned this at GE where we worked hand in hand with HR to productize our on-boarding process where we could bring in groups of people and grow rapidly. At another company we had two "universities" one for new-grads one for industry experienced people. So groups of 20+ people would join every month into a "university" that lasted 14-60 days to train new hires on the company, industries serviced, processes etc. So you could easily do this and support 1000 hires in a year at one company.

3. No hard facts of course, but I'd imagine this is a non-issue overall, but maybe I am wrong. If you just said U.S. or EU, I'd think it would be harder.


👤 detaro
For one company? Or a recruiter working for multiple companies that try to find 1000 people in sum?