A new feature test I did find
Having never come to my mind
Somehow to make it right
Or fix it they even might
Replace it please with the right kind
I think I can understand how many users, including those inside the company, who have used many social networking sites would like the idea of a non-binding thanks, or +1, option. I think it's also another method to encourage engagement by low-rep users and allow the audience (in current parlance) the opportunity to participate. It might even supply a new metric for statisticians to track.
I also think the idea is not implemented in a manner conducive to the overall corporate goals. In so far as I understand the goals anyway. I have two different trains of thought for this "test," which are independent. One is how to implement it, hopefully in a fashion to make it possibly useful, and the other is why to cancel the idea completely.
Cancel the concept:
Internet points for loss 'n gain
The button is a regal pain
Wild oats do not sow
This concept must go
Sure hope it never comes to reign
In the rationale provided, the statistical weight of "thanks" type comments suggested that such a mechanism would be useful as a clutter-free way for users to just say "thanks" to others for taking the time to answer questions. Not true.
- Adding the new button/icon to the voting area is adding clutter to every answer, forever
- Adding the count of "thanks" clicks is adding clutter to the clutter
- Users currently adding the, supposedly disallowed, "thanks" comments are unlikely, in the main, to change their bad habits
- If the user receiving the "thanks" is never notified of them, the rep of the user being thanked is not affected, the "value" of the answer is not affected for ranking in the list of answers, and there is no method to sort by "thanks", then the button, and it's count are completely "noise", or decoration (i.e.: clutter)
Another possible rationale for including this concept is to allow users, or audience, to "participate" in the site at ultra-low rep levels. It allows such to "participate," in an meaningless manner. Their record of participation will not exist if they are not users already, and if they are not users, it removes the inducement to join. Without the button, if enough answers are worth their attention, they might be induced to join so they can up-vote nice answers. With the button available they will think "they've done their part" and move on, never joining the site.
Similarly, for those users without the rep to vote, having the button available to "vote" with reduces their inducement to participate with, as Help Center Reputation page puts it, "The three most important activities on Stack Overflow are Asking, Answering and Editing" so they can earn the rep to cast a real vote.
To actually reduce the number of commenters saying thanks, delete, without apology, any and all such comments. Such a filter should be available, as it must have been used to find them for the statistic used in the decision process.
To raise the level of participation by low-rep users, lower the bar to participation. Perhaps allow voting as soon as they have posted either an answer or a question which has received an upvote, regardless of net votes. Perhaps even allow up-voting as soon as the account is created. It only take 5 rep to participate in meta, including decisions about the site, why should it take three times that to express the positive value of a posting?
Personal experience with voting: There are many sites which I am not a member of. Sometimes I land on one of them from a search engine, and actually find my answer. Out of habit I up-vote the answer only to be reminded that I'm not logged in. In my case, with rep from other sites I'd have the Association Bonus, and could instantly vote. For others who may not be high enough on any site to get that bonus, they join the site, try to vote again, and hit the brick wall of rep needed. So much for a positive first experience. On the other hand, if they get the prompt, join the site and cast their vote, they "thank" the poster, with real thanks in the form of reputation, and they have a positive experience with the site.
One final though in this section is that the law of Unintended consequences still applies to SO, as has been repeatedly demonstrated recently.
Fix the concept
To this button I do not consent
The clutter some users will resent
To control who gives thanks
And avoid the many pranks
A few changes you should implement
Limit who can use it. If it is supposed to be just for "thanks", it probably should only be on answers, and available to the user who posted the question. If it is a method to increase engagement with the unregistered, and/or lower rep users, then is should only be available until the regular upvote privilege is earned, if that should happen for the user.
Limit who sees it. It should only be visible to those who can use it, and the user who is receiving the "thanks."
Limit, even further, who sees the count. The user receiving the thanks should know how much they have received. The user who posed the question, when the thanks is on an answer, probably deserves to see the total as well. That might encourage them to write more "quality" questions if they see an increasing number of "thanks" handed out to those who've answered their question.
Make it less meaningless. If the thanks is cast by a user unable to upvote, it can increment the upvote score while not awading rep like a real vote would. If the intent of having the button is for others who cannot vote to say they like the answer, then it seems reasonable to increment the "vote" count for all to see. This will help with the sorting of answers (including the stale answers) based on votes cast, rather than the rep earned on the question.
If the option to use "thanks" is limited to non-voting users (and non-users), remove the clutter of the vote buttons, Can't use them, why have them?
The use of "thanks" should be just as anonymous as any other vote. As the author of the post, or as a random user, I shouldn't know who clicked thanks any more than I should know who clicked up or down vote.
No matter how it's done, don't add to the gamification by making any achievement badges connected to the "thanks" button, for casters or receivers.
If the button is made available to those able to vote, get aggressive in the removal of related comments. The script, regex, or other tool used to detect the comments for statistics should be good enough to weed out such comments. If, on the other hand, it's not trusted enough to automate comment removal. If it's not trusted for removal operations, it shouldn't be trusted enough to be the base for business and development decisions either.
"+1"
comments? We'll go with it and see with where it goes...