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where would be a good place to recruit webmaster

         

laserfiche

5:09 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Our company is looking to hire a webmaster. Does anyone know where's a good place to find quality webmasters?

also, how can we tell a good webmaster from one that's less qualified? what type of exercise would be useful to differentiate good candidates and bad candidates?

Thanks,
Simon

macz_g

5:16 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Try posting the details in the commercial exchange section and see what bites from here.

I would always try and get recommendations from other professionals, people that you trust.

Works for me.

monkeythumpa

6:27 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Do you need local candidates only? Or can they be anywhere in your country/world? This forum may be good for finding global candidates but you may want to try craigslist.org then click on your city (on the right) for more local targeting.

laserfiche

6:49 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Any suggestions on how to tell a good candidate from a not as qualified? are there tests/exercises we can conduct before inviting them to an actual interview?

Thanks.

macz_g

7:12 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Ask to see portfolio of previous work and ask for references from previous employeres or clients

macz_g

7:41 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Also you could prepare a test yourself that would be comparable to a task they will have to do for you. Give them a day to prepare then, if you have office space, have them complete the challenge for you the next day.

Make them work to get the position. For 1 job I had to go through 3 days of interviews and face a panel interview with 2 others going for the same position.

christopher w

7:49 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree with monkeythumpa - I have had great success finding people through Craiglist. But this also depends on how widely it is used in your city.

rocknbil

11:25 pm on Jun 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



how can we tell a good webmaster from one that's less qualified?

There was a great post here a few weeks ago from one of the real gurus (I think it was tedster?) that posed a couple critical questions. I remember at least one and I'll throw in a couple of my own. Most of these are opinions, take them or leave them:

Ask them what a document type declaration is and why you need it.

Ask how they manage fonts and other visual markup. The correct answer here is style sheets, not font tags. Many people can't even answer this question either way - "I click on it in Dreamweaver and select the font."

On that topic, what is a depricated tag?

What do you do to your sites to optimize them for search engines?

What do you know about SEO?

Ask to see several of their sites. Then go to w3c.org, select the validator link, and punch in the URL. Now, understand, most pages out there won't validate immediately. But what you're looking for here is the "webmaster's" reaction to that page, and how many errors it returns. Gauge it closely. This is a good indicator of what your new web person will do when cornered.

Do you have existing pages,scripts, and systems in place? Set them in front of a perl or php script and ask them to find and fix a typo.

Ask them what they do to insure cross-browser and cross platform compatibility, and how they cope with monitor resolutions. In my OPINION, when someone starts spouting the low percentages of users from this or that browser, or that no one uses this or that browser anymore, what you have is someone who will justify their errant ways, or worse yet, designs/develops for a single target market - their boss. To heck with the rest of the world, they're not paying my check. You want someone who will at least TRY to make sure every user can access your content.

Ask them if they know what 508 guidelines are, and what a text reader is for.

When posed with something they don't understand - for example, someone who doesn't know Javascript at all - ask what they would do if a task requires it. If the answer is "download one free off the web" as opposed to "learn it so I can apply that knowledge to future projects" IMO this would make me back off. The reason being many people get this stuff free and have no understanding of how it works. Then when it breaks, the shrugs are . . . priceless . . .

Just some ideas.

TerryG

2:20 pm on Jun 11, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Good info rocknbil.
I always "try" to build a site that one could view it in the two earliest browsers that were the most common back when ( and I am finding a lot of people that are still using them) and I get ," oh well I have broadband and one of the newest monitors on the market!".
as an example, I built a simple page for my wife so she could check the local weather while at work, she also made the same statement as above. then complained that the page was horrible and unreadable.
well after many questions , come to find out her company uses "lotus notes" & some kind of modified browser and her high tech monitor is set to 640x480 with the text enlarged - this is company wide.

So on that note I would like to add that while asking the questions allow the prospective web builder to ask questions, a lot of information can be gained by the questions asked .

laserfiche

4:29 pm on Jun 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks for everyone who've contributed in this topic. It definitely helps us to screen out applicants that do not suite our needs.

Thanks again.