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How to find software engineers
1. How to Find Software Engineers for
Your Openings
Software Engineers are in high demand these days, at least in
some geographical areas like the San Francisco Bay Area and for some “hot” skills
like Java/mobile engineering. However, it is not easy to find true software
engineering talent anywhere.
Here are some suggestions.
Keywords
For better search, make sure you know how software engineering terms relate to
each other. As an example, Java and JavaScript are two very different skills. A
person who is a C++ developer will definitely know C, but may not know some
specific C libraries. Front End is like User Interface. Back End usually goes along
with Server. Perl and Python are both scripting languages. A person who works
with J2EEcertainly knows Java but may lack some core Java skills.
The Linux operating system is a variation of UNIX.
Some skills, while being required on the job description, are unimportant, go
with the job, and shouldn’t be included in search. I am talking about systems to
track bugs, or to track software versions.
Some skills are hard to search for because the words are so common; an
example would be a Windows Engineer. In cases like this use keywords that are
specific, such as Win32.
Places. Here are just a few places where you might want to look for developers, when
you start getting desperate:
The search engine Blekko has slashtags for a large variety of programming
languages, along with a /people tag. Check it out.
2. Browse your local Meetup groups.
Definitely look on Google+.
Github has contact info for many folks but is hard to search. Few people know
that it allows resume search via its API. To access resumes, hire a coder or
use TalentBin.
Try http://stackoverflow.com/users.
Look for specific mailing lists, forums, yahoo and Google groups. The logos
above give you an idea of what those places can be about.
If all else fails please give us a call at Brain Gain Recruiting!