Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

How many web developers are there? What are the demographics? #7

Open
foolip opened this issue Jun 10, 2022 · 2 comments
Open

How many web developers are there? What are the demographics? #7

foolip opened this issue Jun 10, 2022 · 2 comments

Comments

@foolip
Copy link
Collaborator

foolip commented Jun 10, 2022

Many discussions about web developer research or surveys raise questions around representation and bias. To help answer questions like this, it would be great to have a good idea about what the global population of web developers looks like, as a point of comparison. (This is not to say all research needs to strive to target the global population.)

Here's what I found when looking into this in October 2020:

World:

  • ~16.3M in Q2 2019 (Apparently from SlashData's "Web developer population forecast 2020", but I have no link)
  • lower bound 16.9M (the global developer population 2019 p. 15)
  • upper bound 18.9M (the global developer population 2019 p. 8)
  • So something like 0.25% of the world population (7.7 billion)
  • Growing overall and changing with the economy, so we should really be thinking about this as a confidence “corridor” over time.

Reachable by surveys:

Europe:

  • Eurostat should have data, SlashData refers to it.

USA:

@foolip
Copy link
Collaborator Author

foolip commented Jun 10, 2022

At that time I was mostly focusing on how many web developers there are. I think more important is to understand the basic demographics. Surveys (example) often ask about these some of these demographics:

  • Country
  • Language
  • Age (often to exclude participants under 18 years)
  • Gender identity
  • Race & ethnicity
  • Experience
  • Salary

It would be useful gather and make accessible what we know (and don't know) about these. By gathering many examples, we could start to say what is an outlier and what is typical for some of these demographics. One step further would be to set confidence intervals for what the "true" numbers in the global developers audience is, which is probably not the same as the typical numbers in all the surveys. Specifically, I strongly suspect that men are overrepresented in most web developer surveys, but by how much?

@bkardell
Copy link

I brought this up in the meeting today, but I was thinking that it might be worth running a random survey on MDN - just a quick 1-3 questions that takes almost no time and see what it looks like.

The reason being that it is an extremely widely pointed at, very key and independent resource - the documentation of the commons. It's equally useful to novices and experts. So, it's not likely to have many of the other kinds of biases that have to do with companies, skill levels, who follows who or something geographic, and keeping it short should help avoid the "this is really a better measure of people who are willing to fill in 20 minute questionnaires" problem. Like, at a minimum it would be interesting to see how it correlates to other data.

In the meeting it was also mentioned that there was data from the MDN DNA survey from 2020

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

2 participants