Background
We’re kicking off the first bit of work that will allow us to better communicate with members and visitors via the website. This work will be done incrementally over the coming months. Ultimately it will work across the entire Stack Exchange network, but initial usage will focus on Stack Overflow.
The overall goal of this work is to provide the product team a direct method for onsite communication with members and anonymous users in a way that is appropriate for the message being delivered. This means there will be unique designs that match the intent, priority and objectives of the message. We will be targeting our messages to the people who we need to communicate with. In some cases we will notify everyone on a site or the entire network, in some cases we will limit a notification to users of a specific product (e.g. Jobs or Channels) or a very small subset of a community with a particular problem (e.g. people who have a problem with their account).
We know that some users may not be happy about seeing these messages. We will do our best to try to give you control by making messages dismissible. Please understand that better array of communication options are critical for our business in order to deepen user engagement.
New Feature notification details
The first new notification you will see is for announcing new or significantly improved features. We call it the "new feature" notification (creative, eh?). Maybe some of you saw it for a brief moment on Tuesday. We had to turn it off after some bugs were discovered with the notification and the feature it was announcing. It will likely be turned back on tomorrow (Thursday 9/21).
The “new feature” notification shows up in the top bar and looks like this:
It is accompanied with content balloon that informs you about the details of the new feature:
We are testing a couple variations of the interaction and dismiss logic. Our desire is to create something that stands out when it needs to, but goes away when it isn’t needed any longer.
This is a work in progress and we appreciate your constructive feedback.
Clarifications based on feedback in the comments and answers
Why are you shoving Jobs at me? I’m not interested!
The “new feature” notification (from here on referred to as NFN) is telling you about new features or significant future improvements. These features could be for Q&A, Jobs, Channels or some future product area. This is NOT a feature to push users who aren’t interested in Jobs to Jobs.
Why don’t you show the notification to only those who care?
As mentioned above, there is a lot of work that we will be doing in the future to enable us to target these messages to just the right folks. In this case, we think the salary calculator is generally interesting even if you aren’t looking for a job. Also, we are hoping that people in regions where we don’t have data, will volunteer their data so that we can build out the calculator. For those reasons, we are notifying all our users.
Why didn’t you use the inbox or community bulletin?
- Increased visibility: We want to really draw attention to new features as they are released. This helps expose everyone to them and gives us good data on what is working or not. We want a special notification for this purpose so that is doesn’t get lumped into other general communication
- Wrong medium: Inbox messages are highly targeted and relevant to you, not a general broadcast mechanism.
- Anonymous users: These notifications need to reach anonymous users as well as signed in members. Neither the community bulletin or the inbox currently work for those users. We're planning to redesign the community bulletin, but taking the current iteration of either to anonymous users is not in the cards.
Aren’t you testing two versions?
Yes, we tested two versions:
- simply displays the orange NEW in the topbar. It would persist for the duration of the campaign unless you interact with it. When you click on NEW it displays the content bubble. After clicking the CTA or click dismiss it would go away.
- auto displays the content bubble. If you click on the X it goes away.
We are going with design #2. It is a more direct and clean experience and it resulted in 350% more visits to the new feature.
Notification dismiss
Users can dismiss a notification and you won’t see it again. This is a per-instance dismiss. You will see a NFN when a different feature is released. There is no connection between the email settings and on-site notifications.
NOTE: The initial version required two clicks to dismiss permanently. It was my choice and it was wrong. My logic was to distinguish between two user scenarios: 1) let me carry on with what I'm doing and get back to this later vs. 2) get rid of this forever. My logic was wrong. We are fixing it so that clicking X will immediately dismiss. Clicking off or esc key will hide the balloon.
THIS is what DAG is working on?
The DAG team is working on a variety of projects simultaneously. I'm working on a post to update everyone on the work that is on ongoing and on the top of our backlog. And, we are coming back to the community with an update on how the mentorship experiment went (really cool stuff).
What the heck, you’re announcing this thing three different ways!
Currently there is the “new feature” notification and two items in the Community Bulletin that are promoting the same new feature. Each one plays a unique role. The NFN points directly to the feature, the blog post provides details, the meta post is where you give feedback. As mentioned, we are in the process of reworking the Community Bulletin (how we point people to important blog posts and meta discussions). One approach we will evaluate is to rationalize these things into one thing that points to the various components. This is the start of reworking some of the mechanisms that allow us to communicate with the community. It will include significant changes and minor tweaks. We don’t have it all planned out, but we certainly want all the parts to work well together.
I hope these additional details help clarify some things raised in the answers/comments below. Active users on meta give us early indication of feedback from our most dedicated users. We treat that feedback seriously in the context of the over 3 million signed in users who visit the site each week and the over 50 million monthly visitors who visit monthly. Keep the feedback coming.