Hack Day at Yahoo!
Yesterday (with the help and support of all kinds of people across Yahoo!), I organized and ran the first “Hack Day” for the Search and Marketplace group (Jeremy does a good job of capturing the day). A few weeks ago, I put together an all-volunteer advisory team to decide how we should structure the day. The advisory team included engineers, of course, but we also had solid representation from the UED (user experience design) and product management sides. The advisory team did everything from make Costco runs with me to get “portable geek snacks” to making trips to a local trophy shop to help choose prizes. (In one trip, I was briefly lost with a product manager from Yahoo! Maps — we had a good chuckle over that one.) The help of the advisory team and many others made Hack Day a true grassroots effort.
Throughout the planning, we had a lot of discussion about what the “rules” should be, and we essentially settled on what amounted to no rules. I made sure there was plenty of food and drink throughout the day, but the teams ultimately self-organized and procured their own resources to make things happen during the day. Hacking is about code, without a doubt, but I was equally interested in the organizational hacking that took place throughout the day — teams commandeered conference rooms and turned spaces around the company into hacking war rooms. We kept food and drink in a central place and many people worked there. At the end of the day, anyone with something to show did a 2-minute demo in front of their fellow hackers.
Everyone rose to the occasion. I was absolutely blown away by the sheer number and quality of the hacks that emerged at the end of the day and the teams did a great job with the two-minute limit. The crowd at the end of the day was enthusiastic and boisterous. As hack demos were shown, yells of approval filled the standing-room-only room. The range of hacks was truly mind-boggling — I’m still getting my head around everything that people put together yesterday. One of my weekend tasks (and a really fun one) is running through the hacks again to take a deeper look. I don’t know how to describe it except to say that it’s a privilege and honor to experience and catalog such an incredible burst of hacker creativity. Yahoo! hackers — you ROCK!
If you enjoyed this post, please consider to leave a comment or subscribe to the feed and get future articles delivered to your feed reader.
Comments
[...] Hack Day @ Yahoo! Check out chad’s post about hack day at yahoo!. Ever since the hack yahoo initiative [...]
[...]
The efficacy of time-constrained hacking
Friday’s successful “hack day” experience is still fresh on my mind and a coup [...]
Sweet! The most difficult part will likely be determining how to implement what was gained from the effort expended.
[...] anted, with free food and an element of competition thrown in to motivate folks. As others have noted, it was a fun experience that really resulted some amazing projects. [...]
The Most Fun I’ve Had At Work, Ever
Big kudos to Chad Dickerson of the Technology Development Group for organizing Hack Day at Yahoo! Essentially, HackDay was a day for people at Y! to work on whatever pet project they wanted, with free food and an element of competition thrown in to m…
[...] ation and innovation in the game industry.And yeah, Yahoo had their own highly successfull Hack Day recently as well. So it’s clear that we’re tapping into a model that’s [...]
[...] ayed in the south bay. If you don’t know about Mash Pit, it’s sort of like our Hack Day except that the participants are from all over the place. The get togeth [...]
[...] about my work these days: promoting grassroots innovation at Yahoo! through events like Hack Day, building cool stuff, and trying to glimpse the future through prototyp [...]
[...] t part (and absolutely intentional). We leave lots of room for emergence. See Jeremy and my post for info on the last one, plus some Flickr photos. Expect more after tom [...]
congrats. the hack presentations were really impressive and a great source of inspiration. nice work putting this together.
[...] m headed to Bangalore to visit the Yahoo! office there for their Hack Day (we had one last December and one in March at the main Yahoo! offices in California). Even bette [...]
[...] all night tomorrow night putting together their hacks. Awesome. We’ve now had two (1, 2) in Santa Clara and one in Bangalore. Hack Day #5 happens in Bangalore on J [...]
[...] enjoyed the fruit of Chad’s internal developer efforts (including several very cool Hack Days), and being one of the many regular beneficiaries of Jeremy’s ins [...]
[...]
Yahoo! Hack Day: opening up Yahoo! itself
Ever since I organized the first Hack Day at Yahoo, people have been saying, “wouldn’t it be coo [...]
[...] yesterday or today, but it sounds like it was pretty darn successful and fun! congrats to chad, brad, and the rest of ydn…btw, this beck video is pretty funny… [...]
[...] nt an email out to our internal Hack discussion mailing list (something I seeded after our first internal Hack Day in December of last year) and said, “who wants to h [...]

Really impressive event. When you got up to list the next 25-50 hacks to be presented, I thought, “This Is Huge.” :-)