Test has concluded, nobody should be seeing this particular iteration any more.
Crunching some numbers to figure out what worked and what didn't. Regardless, the feature won't be turned on again as it exists (have to add dismissal at the very least, probably much much more).
Short answer:
We're running a test around that feature, to see if providing a simple search for "similar questions" helps people find another question to answer.
It is uncertain whether that feature will stick around at the moment. Currently approximately 50% of Stack Overflow answerers will see it.
A more detailed answer:
We've been thinking about ways to make it easier for people to find questions to answer. We've been working on making search better, playing around with homepage algorithms, etc.
This feature has the following thoughts behind it:
- People are either in an answering "mode" or not
- So we use "posted an answer" as a trigger for display
- This has the benefit of not changing the UI for people just looking for an existing answer to a question they currently have
- Finding a question to answer is a non-trivial effort
- A tailored search is better than our existing "by tag" pages for finding questions
The current test is basically an MVP. The search isn't very sophisticated (though it is technically a little more powerful than what you can do through /search
), the copy and UX is only "acceptable," and so on. We'll almost certainly try further refinements, provided the feature proves useful in the first place.
Obvious things to test are:
- Different copy (perhaps customized based on how established a user is)
- I include suppressing under certain circumstances under this
- Especially if the "similar question"-page gets other links added, it's possible a person already knows about it and doesn't need to be reminded
- Different search criteria
- Using more than just the tags at least
- Perhaps customized based on what we know about the person
- Maybe even customized on a per-tag/per-question-category basis
We're testing now so we can fail-fast, if this turns out to be a dead end we won't have wasted much time on it.