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Who Will Remain? An Evaluation of Actual Person-Job and Person-Team Fit to Predict Developer Retention in FLOSS Projects

Published: 04 January 2012 Publication History

Abstract

Many businesses and private households rely on Free Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS). Due to a lack of sustained contributors, however, most FLOSS projects do not survive. The early identification of developers who are likely to remain is thus an eminent challenge for the management of FLOSS initiatives. Previous research has shown that individuals' subjective assessment is often inaccurate emphasizing the need to objectively evaluate retention behavior. Consistent with the concepts Person-Job (P-J) and Person-Team (P-T) fit from the traditional recruitment literature, we derive objective measures to predict developer retention in FLOSS projects. In an analysis of the contribution behavior of former Google Summer of Code (GSoC) students we reveal that the level of development experience and conversational knowledge is strongly associated with retention. Surprisingly, our analysis reveals that students with abilities that are underrepresented in the project and students with a higher academic education do not remain considerably longer.

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  • (2024)OpenRank Leaderboard: Motivating Open Source Collaborations Through Social Network Evaluation in AlibabaProceedings of the 46th International Conference on Software Engineering: Software Engineering in Practice10.1145/3639477.3639734(346-357)Online publication date: 14-Apr-2024
  • (2022)How to characterize the health of an Open Source Software project? A snowball literature review of an emerging practiceProceedings of the 18th International Symposium on Open Collaboration10.1145/3555051.3555067(1-12)Online publication date: 7-Sep-2022
  • (2022)Turnover of Companies in OpenStack: Prevalence and RationaleACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology10.1145/351084931:4(1-24)Online publication date: 12-Jul-2022
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cover image Guide Proceedings
HICSS '12: Proceedings of the 2012 45th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
January 2012
5600 pages
ISBN:9780769545257

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IEEE Computer Society

United States

Publication History

Published: 04 January 2012

Author Tags

  1. Developer Retention
  2. IS personnel
  3. OSS/FLOSS
  4. Open Source Software
  5. Open source
  6. Open source software development
  7. Recruiting
  8. Team staffing

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Cited By

View all
  • (2024)OpenRank Leaderboard: Motivating Open Source Collaborations Through Social Network Evaluation in AlibabaProceedings of the 46th International Conference on Software Engineering: Software Engineering in Practice10.1145/3639477.3639734(346-357)Online publication date: 14-Apr-2024
  • (2022)How to characterize the health of an Open Source Software project? A snowball literature review of an emerging practiceProceedings of the 18th International Symposium on Open Collaboration10.1145/3555051.3555067(1-12)Online publication date: 7-Sep-2022
  • (2022)Turnover of Companies in OpenStack: Prevalence and RationaleACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology10.1145/351084931:4(1-24)Online publication date: 12-Jul-2022
  • (2022)Metrics to quantify software developer experienceProceedings of the 37th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied Computing10.1145/3477314.3507304(1562-1569)Online publication date: 25-Apr-2022
  • (2020)Recommending Tasks to Newcomers in OSS ProjectsProceedings of the 16th International Symposium on Open Collaboration10.1145/3412569.3412571(1-14)Online publication date: 25-Aug-2020
  • (2020)How to not get richProceedings of the ACM/IEEE 42nd International Conference on Software Engineering10.1145/3377811.3380410(1209-1221)Online publication date: 27-Jun-2020
  • (2020)A theory of the engagement in open source projects via summer of code programsProceedings of the 28th ACM Joint Meeting on European Software Engineering Conference and Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering10.1145/3368089.3409724(421-431)Online publication date: 8-Nov-2020
  • (2019)Why do developers take breaks from contributing to OSS projects?Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Software Health10.1109/SoHeal.2019.00009(9-16)Online publication date: 28-May-2019
  • (2019)Why do episodic volunteers stay in FLOSS communities?Proceedings of the 41st International Conference on Software Engineering10.1109/ICSE.2019.00100(948-954)Online publication date: 25-May-2019
  • (2019)Going farther togetherProceedings of the 41st International Conference on Software Engineering10.1109/ICSE.2019.00078(688-699)Online publication date: 25-May-2019
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