It seems that each site in private beta shows a count down after 7 days, like enter image description here independent, of the fact if and when it is really going public beta. I remember to have seen a delay of some hours at the start of http://dba.stackexchange.com.

I think it would be better not to show such misleading information.

Even better would be to distinguish between the cases where there are some technical delays or when the site is hold intensionally in private beta, which seems to be the case with Healthcare IT.

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The countdown made sense back in the pre-community-team glory days, when developers still ran the show, and private/public beta launches worked like clockwork. But now that more factors are at play, and we're actually monitoring the health of private betas, you're right: it makes more sense to remove the countdown, so that's what we've done.

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I also recommend changing the way private betas are handled. Instead of at least 1 week in private beta and extended to 2 or 3 if "your site sucks in Q&A volume", change it to 4 weeks in private beta, with the possibility of early graduation to public beta if "your site is awesome in Q&A volume". It might seem like a small change, but it will have very significant impact.

As Stack Exchange strays away from generic Cooking/Gardening/Religion/Computers, etc., and diversifies in to niche/research level topic areas such as Economics/Signal Processing/Theoretical Physics, private betas tend to draw out for more than a week and it can be frustrating for users when they learn that it has to stay in extended private beta. It is not the fault of the community that it takes a long time (as per unknown SE metrics)... good questions are just very hard to ask in such topics and answering it is even harder. Since SE team never gives out a hard number for "this is when we'll open to the public", other than "good volume of content", people are left eagerly anticipating for its graduation, which never seems to come. Here's a relevant discussion from the Theoretical Physics site which shows the frustration of the users: Why is private beta being extended?

You can't put the same 200 people in a room and force them to magically increase the volume of questions, and despite the community team's best efforts, it does look like a bitch-slap and punishment for poor question volume than an opportunity for the site to mature. I very strongly felt that a good number of users left the Signal Processing site out of frustration at not being able to invite others to increase the volume and the site taking 3 weeks to get out of private beta. The recent change to allow invitations solves half of this problem, but the other half still remains.

So I suggest that private betas be at least 4 weeks long, and graduate early if the site has exceptional content quality and quantity. That way the community is happy that their contributions are recognized and no one is biting finger nails, anticipating when it'll get out of private beta.

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Please can you be more explicit about 'The recent change to allow invitations', that is completely new to me. Does it mean that current beta users can invite others? – bernd_k Oct 23 '11 at 16:06
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OK I found it thanks to meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/54146/… – bernd_k Oct 23 '11 at 16:26
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