New users of a Stack Exchange site may not fully understand how the site works. For example, the user may not know how to vote, what reputation is, how to format a question or answer, or how to navigate the site. While the FAQ and privilege pages may offer enough information to teach new users some of the basics of Stack Exchange, they aren't the most coherent or beginner-friendly way to teach how the site works.

To help new users learn the ropes, I suggest a guided tour for users creating an account for the first time on a Stack Exchange site. The tour should consist of a series of pages that (suggestions welcome):

  • welcomes the user to the site
  • explain how to post (and edit) a question, answer, or comment
  • specify the scope of the site, what questions are on or off topic, and other questions to avoid asking (such as those that are highly subjective)
  • provide examples of good and bad questions and answers
  • show how to vote on posts and accept answers
  • explain the reputation and badge systems
  • show how to navigate the site; how to search for questions using the search box, tags, etc.; and how to find users
  • show users how to read user profiles
  • explain what meta is and how to use it
  • introduce chat and explain how to use it
  • introduce users to the Stack Exchange network as a whole, and how the site forms part of the SE network (including a brief introduction to Area 51 and the new site proposal process)
  • discuss more advanced features such as flagging a post, voting to close, community wiki, etc.

By creating a guided tour for new users, we can help keep users interested in Stack Exchange and make the site easier for novices to use. There should be a bronze badge for completing the tour. Personally, I'd like to have the tour give the impression that users are embarking on an exciting journey by posting their first question or answer.

We can use the suggestions on RFC - Stack Exchange 2-minute intro as a start, but I'd prefer an interactive page-by-page introduction on the sites themselves, where users can learn by doing, rather than by watching a video.


Edit: As an extension of this feature request, we may want to consider taking the approach Dropbox takes: create a series of "quests" for the user to take, each involving a key function of the system (which includes completing the guided tour). Once the user completes a certain number of these quests, award a reputation bonus (perhaps 50) to the user. These quests should include (suggestions welcome):

  • complete the guided tour
  • ask a question, earning at least one upvote
  • answer a question, earning at least one upvote
  • accept an answer
  • share a link to a question or answer, visited by at least 25 unique IP addresses
  • flag a post (marked helpful)
  • participate in meta
  • participate in chat
  • associate an account on one site with accounts on other Stack Exchange sites

Here's how Dropbox does it: Dropbox Get Started page


Assuming we don't implement the "quests" above, we can nonetheless give users a reputation incentive (perhaps 10 or 15 points) on top of the badge for completing the guided tour. That way, we can encourage users to read about how the site works, helping new users write better posts and take better advantage of what Stack Exchange has to offer.


One of the key reasons to have a guided tour is to have all the important information on how to use Stack Exchange in one place, rather than scattered across places like the FAQ, the privileges pages, the meta site, and the blog. The way the rules are presently laid out on Stack Exchange can make it hard for beginners to fully understand the rules. A guided tour can make these rules and guidelines more cohesively arranged, which can greatly help users who need help finding a certain rule or guideline that they may have missed. The tour doesn't need to thoroughly explain every rule, but it should briefly mention most of the key points about using Stack Exchange; the tour text should contain links to full discussions of rules.

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Are you inventing FAQ2? IMO FAQ covers most of the things you've enlisted, even provides a bronze badge for reading all chapters. For example -- how to post a question -- isn't that easy and definite? – om-nom-nom Mar 17 '12 at 21:27
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@om-nom-nom: A guided tour is not a FAQ. A FAQ is a static block of text. A guided tour is more like an application or a videogame's tutorial level. It tells you exactly what to click on, what each element means, etc. It's much more interactive than just a block of text. – Nicol Bolas Mar 17 '12 at 21:32
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What I'm envisioning is a more interactive, step-by-step approach that is clearer to new users and easier to follow, which links all the pieces of the site together and helps users fully understand how the site works. – DragonLord the Fiery Mar 17 '12 at 21:35
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I think this makes a lot of sense, and is long overdue. Don't make it mandatory, but give it an incentive. It could coax people through the parts, and could be done with nice graphics and easy explanations to help them along. It could also explain a few of the "things you'll get to once you get more rep," like comments - show what they are, and explain they'll get them soon. Award them 10 rep or something for getting through it. Or, make it more like 50 rep, and increase the minimum points needed to vote. – nhinkle Mar 18 '12 at 0:29
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I definitely think a rep incentive (and maybe even a badge, like the one you get for reading the FAQ) is a good idea. But 50 points might be too steep; 10 or 15 is a good bone. – Cody Gray Mar 18 '12 at 7:44
"I see you are trying to ask a question on Stack Overflow. Would you like some help with that?" /shudder – mindcorrosive Mar 21 '12 at 10:07
It would also be great to give first formatting help. Especially line breaks are hard to get at first (double spaces at line ends). But also code-blocks, headings, quotes ... – örs Mar 21 '12 at 13:42
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It might be worth adding (or SHOUTING) that this is about Stack Exchange, not (just) Stack Overflow. SO users tend to be fairly ... uncaring ... about new users (we're drowning in them), and that can influence their reactions. – Benjol Mar 22 '12 at 7:01

4 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted

First off: I like parts of your idea, though possibly not for the reasons you'd hope. More on this later, but... keep it in mind.

While the FAQ and privilege pages may offer enough information to teach new users some of the basics of Stack Exchange, they aren't the most coherent or beginner-friendly way to teach how the site works.

New users - the vast, vast majority of them - won't read the FAQ, or the privilege pages, or notification banners or even all of the instructions on the login screen.

And that's ok. It doesn't mean they're stupid, or lazy, or hate us. They're here because a Google search turned up an answer to their question, or answers to their last three dozen questions, and now that they have a question we don't have an answer for we're stuck in their head as a good place to look for one anyway.

Most importantly: they're not here to get reputation, or badges, or become part of a community. They're here for answers to their questions. Anything we throw in their way - from a line of text to a multi-page document - is just a roadblock they have to navigate around in order to get to their destination.

With me so far? Good.

Harnessing desire for the benefit of all

Now, a new user to Dropbox wants storage space. Quite possibly they want storage space they can get stuff into easily, from where ever that stuff happens to currently reside, and retrieve from some other location. Those are the users Dropbox wants at least. So the quests exist to make sure they've set that up properly before they get a ton of storage space to play around with. Note that each quest they must complete is something they'd probably have to do anyway - making sure they do it up-front just saves everyone time and frustration later, after they've spent 2 hours uploading that video of the kids eating watermelon on Independence Day and now need to figure out how to pull it down on the desktop where they can edit it and re-upload it for the grandfolks.

At no point in the process - and this is critical to understanding why it works - does Dropbox ask them to spend a few hours hanging out in the Dropbox Townhall where they can discuss matters of Dropbox governance and perhaps help a few other Dropbox users learn to use Dropbox. There's no gratuitous "learning about the Dropbox community" here - everything a new user does is self-serving, and they're rewarded for doing things that benefit them by being given more things that benefit them.

So what's the equivalent new user checklist on Stack Exchange?

You're 1 step away from a helpful answer!
The one quest below will teach you how to get the most out of your Stack Exchange. Finish at least one of them, and we'll give you a reward!

  1. Ask a clear, useful question

That's it.

No really, that's it. For most of the new users on Stack Exchange, all of this other stuff is just... Meaningless. We go well out of our way to give it some meaning with these token economies of badges and "reputation", but boil it down to its fundamental essence and the primary motivation for folks asking questions, the single best reward we can offer them for doing a good job with it, is... a good answer.

And that's also the best thing most of them can do for us. All this other "stuff" - badges, reputation, comments, voting, meta, chat, unicorns, waffles... It serves a purpose, and if they complete that one key quest they'll get plenty of them... But it's infrastructure, overhead - the core value of these sites is utterly, ridiculously simple:

  • Useful answers to common questions.

Indeed, I'd be really embarrassed about writing 11 paragraphs to get to that end, if this question didn't already have three answers, with only Andomar's even coming close to the truth on this and hardly even a kind word for his efforts.

So, here we are at last. I'm sorry, but there's no way in hell this sort of byzantine introduction will ever accomplish your goal of a "coherent, beginner-friendly way to teach [people] how the site works." It doesn't match their goals, it doesn't make them do things they'd want or have to do anyway, and it doesn't necessarily even benefit us - really, the last thing I want new users to get is an "introduction to chat". Rewarding them with reputation would just be insulting to them and harmful to us - they'll get plenty of rep if they post a useful question, and if they can't or won't do that all we would have accomplished would be making 10-50 points the new 1.

But I said I liked parts of your idea, so let's get to that...

Those infuriating nerds who actually do read the manual

Ah, remember being a kid? Opening a gift, to find some game or gadget you'd been lusting after, tearing open the wrapper, dumping the pieces out on the table, and diving in to see how they worked?

Yeah, me neither. Since you're actually proposing this idea, I'm guessing you were more like me, and that new toy sat, lonely and ignored, while you eagerly paged through the manual, absorbing every usage instruction, troubleshooting tip, obvious warning about not using it while plugged in and showering, and which screws would absolutely void your warranty if removed. And then you went and removed those screws, just in case there was something really cool inside. And then you went and wrote up a better manual, with all the details they left out of the main one.

Most people don't do this. Even if they wanted to, they don't have time.

But... That tiny minority who does, the ones who take the time to fully understand the system they're using - perhaps before really even using it - and then take the additional time to find all the undocumented bits that no one talks about and even the designers don't know or let onto knowing... And then publish that...

That minority is critical to keeping these sites running. When a new site launches, it's really useful to have one of them active on it. When one of the normal users gets into trouble, they're there to explain how things work, and why they work that way, and how to make them work. Having the right person with the right information in the right place at the right time is vastly more useful than a tour no one pays attention to.

And right now, the best resource they have is The Community FAQ here on Meta. Which has been maintained and expanded for years now, and is a fantastic resource, but could use a bit of re-organization, because it's not a terribly cohesive or even coherent document.

So I'm going to recommend that you, instead of focusing on some sort of "Stack Exchange for Dummies" tour, look at ways in which all of that detailed information could be presented more effectively to that handful of users for whom reading it is actually their goal.

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Flagged for excessive Shogging⁹. – random Mar 28 '12 at 1:09
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Dropboxed for excessive Dropbox of the word "Dropbox". – gnostradamus Mar 28 '12 at 2:38
Totally agree. I still think a 90 second video presentation of Stack Exchange would be a good idea. Not as a prerequisite for asking questions, nor for rep or badges, just for the curious: "I want to know more, but not too much more". – Benjol Mar 28 '12 at 6:12
Your answer makes perfect sense, and I totally agree. I'll ask a new question as a follow-up to this question based on your feedback when I get a chance (I'm busy with a take-home exam right now :P). – DragonLord the Fiery Mar 28 '12 at 7:00
WRONG....the FAQ and others are after the fact...after the question has been asked....YOU have to take action and refer the user to those. – Benalmadena Apr 5 at 12:52
Thus a Entry exam test or a video would be more than welcome, to HELP new users. – Benalmadena Apr 5 at 13:13
@Benalmadena: we've actually tried to incorporate some of these ideas into the new about page; that said, SE still isn't dropbox and the best "test" we can give someone is... Just writing a question or answer and seeing if the community will accept it. – Shog9 Apr 5 at 15:45
@Shog9..so we will continue to allow people to bypass the lobby. – Benalmadena Apr 5 at 19:41
@Benalmadena: the lobby on SE is /questions/ask. We do have information we give new users first, and some additional roadblocks in some areas, but... At some point you have to just let someone ask a question before you know if they've learned how to ask a question. – Shog9 Apr 5 at 19:50
@Shog9..that is rather tiresome and time consuming to the mature users, and frustrating to new users not understanding why they are voted down, or closed or deleted, or referred to read the pages and pages of how to ask a question. – Benalmadena Apr 5 at 20:20
@Benal: read the first two steps of Dragonlord's proposed onboarding system... And tell me how they're any different from what's in place right now? – Shog9 Apr 5 at 20:40
@Shog9 they are not ! And who has time to watch a movie, mostly people just come to ask their question, not spend a long time learning how to ask it. – Benalmadena Apr 5 at 21:24
Who's proposing that anyone watch a movie? That's an even worse idea! – Shog9 Apr 5 at 21:25

A good idea, but a few issues:

  • Does a one-and-done beginner who just needs a certain Python question answered need to learn extra stuff?
  • How is this implemented?
  • What exactly is implemented?

I'm assuming you are thinking JavaScript/Web 2.0 stuff with interaction.

What about if a few Good Samaritans made a thorough YouTube video with all that you're requesting? For example, to:

show how to navigate the site; how to search for questions using the search box, tags, etc.; and how to find users

Well a YouTube video works fine. After all, Eclipse and Netbeans IDE vids are very well-received. And the FAQ will reference that.

Again, it's a great idea - it's just that to do it well is a fairly big amount of work, and most newbies usually skip that kind of thing.

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I like this idea. There are already various blog posts by Stack Overflow's more illustrious members which discuss the site at length, not to mention countless posts and podcasts from the Stack Exchange team. But that's a daunting amount of reading/listening. A quick one-or-two-minute screencast walking through the site would be pretty easy to do and can cover all of the basics from a new user perspective, with commentary on how the community generally behaves and reacts to things. Naturally, the video would re-enforce the idea of "always read the FAQ." Not too detailed, or it would get dated. – David Mar 17 '12 at 21:43
@David - Thank You for your comment - Yes, agreed - it should be fairly general. – Adel Mar 17 '12 at 21:50
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I like the idea of an optional multistep process which, if users complete, they get a badge and 50 rep (so they can comment). It'd hit the subjects of the top 10 mod flags, such as how to ask a good question, what are subjective questions, professional behavior, etc. Something that requires interaction, so that you can't just play the video in another tab with the sound off... – Won't Mar 21 '12 at 10:45
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You have to be more than just a Good Samaritan to put in the considerable effort required to create a quality video with no guarantee from the team that it will ever be linked from anywhere official... – Benjol Mar 22 '12 at 6:57
@Benjol - I believe SO can offer a nice rep package to the winner! As in, make it a competition. Whoever wins, gets 1000 bonus rep plus some recognition. To prevent the "but that's unfair and fake rep" argument, entrants must have already attained 2000 rep to participate in the video-making competition. So it's assurance that A) they know enough about SO and B) they aren't e-bums who dropped in for some free 'easy' rep . But TBH you can also make the prize SO swag(mug and T and USB). – Adel Mar 22 '12 at 13:36
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@won I want to restate my violent opposition to any plan that grants rep for doing arbitrary basic actions. You learn the game not by reading some manual or taking a tour, but by playing the game. Users that aren't willing to do this will be 10 times more dangerous if we let them unlock rep by cheating a tour. – Jeff Atwood Mar 27 '12 at 19:03

New SO users arrive with a problem that they are stuck at. They want to ask a question; their minds are busy, and there is little room for distraction. So unless you limit distraction to a minimum, people with real questions CANNOT ask them on SO.

I just tested, and if you hit Ask Question as a new user, you

  • Get hit by a wall of text
  • Have to check a checkbox
  • Click the next button
  • After that you are told you have to create an account (wtf?)
  • An incomprehensible OpenID screen pops up

You probably lost 90% of the interesting questions right there. I probably wouldn't have joined myself if SO had made me go through that crap three years ago.

Adding yet another hurdle like a tour or a quest would make this problem even worse. Programmers want to solve problems, not take a guided tour in what management thinks would be the ideal Stack Overflow citizen.

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Would you completely dismiss the idea of an optional tour-that-prevents-you-from-getting-your-dumb-ass-auto-postbanned that (once completed) earns you a badge and enough rep to leave comments? – Won't Mar 21 '12 at 13:02
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@Won't: Say you've resolved your question and decide that you like Stack Overflow. Then you come back the next day. At that point, a tour would be great. (My theory is that the wall-of-text and required registration lower the quality of first questions by removing people with hot issues from the pool.) – Andomar Mar 21 '12 at 13:43
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I don't agree with the "wall of text scares off good users with hot questions" opinion at all. But I do agree that we shouldn't require users take a tour before they can interact with the site (wall of text, checkbox, and register is pretty standard in order to post on most websites). – Won't Mar 21 '12 at 14:04
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"StackOverflow is different. Deal with it." - every SO mod, ever. :) – Won't Mar 21 '12 at 14:17
@won I would be VIOLENTLY F'ING OPPOSED to granting rep for anything like this, or to be honest this entire proposed feature in any form. For one thing, this already exists; there's a bronze badge for reading every section of the FAQ. Protip: USERS. DON'T. CARE. The only way to educate is "just in time", not some ridiculous guided tour. Want to know what questions are on topic? READ THE FRONT PAGE OF THE SITE. Users who can't do that.. are not going to be helped by some Disneyland Tour. – Jeff Atwood Mar 27 '12 at 9:41
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@JeffAtwood, for Stack Overflow, I agree. For some other sites, I'm not so sure. If we want to get those grannies onto parents.SE, we'll have to play nice :) – Benjol Mar 27 '12 at 13:05
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@JeffAtwood: You're violently opposed to it, yet you claim it already exists? Logic circuts, overloading, etc. – Won't Mar 27 '12 at 13:22
@won a "guided tour" is a non starter. Get the bronze badge for reading the FAQ, which already exists. Heck, get all the bronze badges. And rep for completing a guided tour.. well, twitter.com/#!/codinghorror/status/184576782232600580 and meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/65234/… – Jeff Atwood Mar 27 '12 at 18:57
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Note that the process is a bit easier on SE sites that aren't Stack Overflow, Andomar - we've put up a few roadblocks there over the years. But otherwise, this answer pretty much nails it - there's no motivation for folks to read this stuff, so no matter how well it's presented, they won't read it. Heck, even the folks who post so much crap they get auto-banned by the system routinely fail to read or comprehend the detailed instructions for getting the ban lifted... And we link to that in the message that informs them that they're banned! @Won't – Shog9 Mar 28 '12 at 1:13

Update: Considering the sheer amount of content involved, only content in Phase I should be required for the user to receive the badge and rep bonus, and this would be more of a full manual/help system than a guided tour. The most critical content would form part of the basic guided tour; the rest would be included in an extended tour or comprehensive help system, which is updated to follow changes over time.


Extending what Won't♦ said, it's best to start slow and begin implementing a guided tour which focuses on the most important issues first. This tour will require some level of interaction (such as completing a brief quiz). From there, we can begin to expand, adding more topics and adding greater interactivity, such as prompts like "click here to vote up" overlaid on sample content. It would be best for this to progress in phases, since this is such a large undertaking. These phases are intended to be additive such that content and features in a later phase are added onto existing functionality as development progresses.

Phase I

In Phase I, we will focus on the most common problems beginners encounter on Stack Exchange sites. Only a minimal level of interactivity is expected, but quizzes may be considered. Topics covered in this phase should include:

  • voting on posts and accepting answers
  • basic aspects of the reputation system
  • how to write high-quality posts, including basic Markdown formatting and posting images
  • how to edit posts
  • the scope of the site, including what questions are on- or off-topic
  • commenting on posts (avoiding non-answer posts such as "me too!" in the answer area)
  • content that should not be posted, such as product recommendations on most sites, spam, or subjective questions that invoke discussion rather than objective responses

Phase II

In Phase II, we will expand on the content in Phase I by covering most topics involved in day-to-day use of a Stack Exchange site. The tour should contain sample content where a user can learn about the purpose and usage of commonly used elements such as the voting controls by clicking on them. Topics covered in this phase should include:

  • how reputation and badges work
  • sharing links to questions and answers
  • flagging posts for moderator attention or as spam or offensive
  • rate limits on common actions such as the number of questions or comments that can be posted in a period of time (50 questions per month, for example)
  • navigating the website and searching for post and users
  • retagging questions
  • suggesting edits to posts
  • using the revision history of a post
  • usage and purpose of community wiki
  • tag wikis and excerpts
  • usage and purpose of the meta site
  • usage and purpose of chat
  • reading user profiles, and customizing the user's own profile
  • an overview of the Stack Exchange network as a whole, as well as the new site proposal process at Area 51
  • associating user accounts across sites in the Stack Exchange network

Phase III

In Phase III, we will cover advanced topics in Stack Exchange, focusing on the tools used in moderation, from voting to close to the 10k moderator tools as well as a brief mention of the powers of a community moderator, such as locking a post or warning or suspending a user. In addition to virtual content within the tour, context-sensitive help should be available on actual site elements upon user request, perhaps by pressing F1, prompting the user to click on the element he/she needs help with. Topics covered in this phase should include:

  • using the /review pages to find and take action on undesirable content
  • handling suggested edits on posts, and the suggested-edit queue
  • voting to close (with a brief review on flagging)
  • voting to delete posts
  • 10k moderator tools such as lists of recently deleted posts, post timelines, and anonymous feedback statistics
  • protecting questions (15k privilege)
  • the community moderator election process
  • tools reserved for community moderators (denoted as ♦), such as:
    • locking posts
    • converting answers to comments
    • migrating questions to any other site on the Stack Exchange network
    • merging, warning, suspending, or deleting user accounts

As this answer is community wiki, feel free to edit this answer as appropriate to add or remove suggestions.

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