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Mathieu Guindon
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Stack Overflow isn't just Q&A's. It's a community. There's a culture: the entire Stack Exchange network is community-moderated. It's that culture that polarizes a bunch of people about SO/SE; it's also that culture that makes SO/SE so successful - SE sites aren't your everyday discussion forum. You don't walk into SO with a blatant "gimmeh teh codez" question if you want to have a good day.

It is known.

To include more people, all SO/SE needs to do, is keep being that - and keep the content quality high. Which is hard to do without the power users with the required privileges to enforce that.

Take first-time users by the hand and walk them through a brief summary of the rulebook with a 2-minute interactive presentation (a bit like the [tour], but not just about site/app mechanics - i.e. an actual "tour": the term "Minimal Complete Verifiable Example" shouldn't be first encountered in a comment by someone that just voted to close your first post), and then progressively unveil the functionality as their reputation score increases and new privileges are acquired: that gamification element is also fundamental to SE.

This is what the SO/SE app mobile apps should capture and convey: by including tools for each relevant privilege level as features.

And then you could give users the ultimate incentive to download and use the SO/SE Official app: get someone to suck it up and take that Excel worksheet and write VBA codedo whatever it takes to fix the swag inventory management and have in-app purchases for SO mugs, tees, hats, keychains, stickers, pens, whatever: just shut up, charge the shipping fees, a 75% markup, and take my money. It's good for the economy; good business for the swag suppliers, and a constant flow of cash from avid users and die-hard fanatics that demand nothing more than throwing their money at you... if you'll let them.

But in-app purchases aren't the real driver (or even necessary): it's implementing the score++ == tooling++ relationship in the app, that encapsulates the essence of SO/SE and gets you a central coherent backbone to implement features against. You avoid overwhelming new users while giving your more experimented faithful users the tools they worked so hard to unlock.

By implementing the tooling associated with reputation score, you teach new users that download this app exactly what SO/SE is about: they get to have this HUGE knowledge base in their pocket, and they're a part of it, and the more they're a part of it the more it's theirs to protect from bad content.

Sounds much like the website? Mission. Fucking. Accomplished.

Stack Overflow isn't just Q&A's. It's a community. There's a culture: the entire Stack Exchange network is community-moderated. It's that culture that polarizes a bunch of people about SO/SE; it's also that culture that makes SO/SE so successful - SE sites aren't your everyday discussion forum. You don't walk into SO with a blatant "gimmeh teh codez" question if you want to have a good day.

It is known.

To include more people, all SO/SE needs to do, is keep being that - and keep the content quality high. Which is hard to do without the power users with the required privileges to enforce that.

Take first-time users by the hand and walk them through a brief summary of the rulebook with a 2-minute interactive presentation (a bit like the [tour], but not just about site/app mechanics - i.e. an actual "tour": the term "Minimal Complete Verifiable Example" shouldn't be first encountered in a comment by someone that just voted to close your first post), and then progressively unveil the functionality as their reputation score increases and new privileges are acquired: that gamification element is also fundamental to SE.

This is what the SO/SE app mobile apps should capture and convey: by including tools for each relevant privilege level as features.

And then you could give users the ultimate incentive to download and use the SO/SE Official app: get someone to suck it up and take that Excel worksheet and write VBA code to have in-app purchases for SO mugs, tees, hats, keychains, stickers, pens, whatever: just shut up, charge the shipping fees, a 75% markup, and take my money. It's good for the economy; good business for the swag suppliers, and a constant flow of cash from avid users and die-hard fanatics that demand nothing more than throwing their money at you... if you'll let them.

But in-app purchases aren't the real driver (or even necessary): it's implementing the score++ == tooling++ relationship in the app, that encapsulates the essence of SO/SE and gets you a central coherent backbone to implement features against. You avoid overwhelming new users while giving your more experimented faithful users the tools they worked so hard to unlock.

By implementing the tooling associated with reputation score, you teach new users that download this app exactly what SO/SE is about: they get to have this HUGE knowledge base in their pocket, and they're a part of it, and the more they're a part of it the more it's theirs to protect from bad content.

Sounds much like the website? Mission. Fucking. Accomplished.

Stack Overflow isn't just Q&A's. It's a community. There's a culture: the entire Stack Exchange network is community-moderated. It's that culture that polarizes a bunch of people about SO/SE; it's also that culture that makes SO/SE so successful - SE sites aren't your everyday discussion forum. You don't walk into SO with a blatant "gimmeh teh codez" question if you want to have a good day.

It is known.

To include more people, all SO/SE needs to do, is keep being that - and keep the content quality high. Which is hard to do without the power users with the required privileges to enforce that.

Take first-time users by the hand and walk them through a brief summary of the rulebook with a 2-minute interactive presentation (a bit like the [tour], but not just about site/app mechanics - i.e. an actual "tour": the term "Minimal Complete Verifiable Example" shouldn't be first encountered in a comment by someone that just voted to close your first post), and then progressively unveil the functionality as their reputation score increases and new privileges are acquired: that gamification element is also fundamental to SE.

This is what the SO/SE app mobile apps should capture and convey: by including tools for each relevant privilege level as features.

And then you could give users the ultimate incentive to download and use the SO/SE Official app: get someone to suck it up and do whatever it takes to fix the swag inventory management and have in-app purchases for SO mugs, tees, hats, keychains, stickers, pens, whatever: just shut up, charge the shipping fees, a 75% markup, and take my money. It's good for the economy; good business for the swag suppliers, and a constant flow of cash from avid users and die-hard fanatics that demand nothing more than throwing their money at you... if you'll let them.

But in-app purchases aren't the real driver (or even necessary): it's implementing the score++ == tooling++ relationship in the app, that encapsulates the essence of SO/SE and gets you a central coherent backbone to implement features against. You avoid overwhelming new users while giving your more experimented faithful users the tools they worked so hard to unlock.

By implementing the tooling associated with reputation score, you teach new users that download this app exactly what SO/SE is about: they get to have this HUGE knowledge base in their pocket, and they're a part of it, and the more they're a part of it the more it's theirs to protect from bad content.

Sounds much like the website? Mission. Fucking. Accomplished.

Source Link
Mathieu Guindon
  • 71.1k
  • 23
  • 34

Stack Overflow isn't just Q&A's. It's a community. There's a culture: the entire Stack Exchange network is community-moderated. It's that culture that polarizes a bunch of people about SO/SE; it's also that culture that makes SO/SE so successful - SE sites aren't your everyday discussion forum. You don't walk into SO with a blatant "gimmeh teh codez" question if you want to have a good day.

It is known.

To include more people, all SO/SE needs to do, is keep being that - and keep the content quality high. Which is hard to do without the power users with the required privileges to enforce that.

Take first-time users by the hand and walk them through a brief summary of the rulebook with a 2-minute interactive presentation (a bit like the [tour], but not just about site/app mechanics - i.e. an actual "tour": the term "Minimal Complete Verifiable Example" shouldn't be first encountered in a comment by someone that just voted to close your first post), and then progressively unveil the functionality as their reputation score increases and new privileges are acquired: that gamification element is also fundamental to SE.

This is what the SO/SE app mobile apps should capture and convey: by including tools for each relevant privilege level as features.

And then you could give users the ultimate incentive to download and use the SO/SE Official app: get someone to suck it up and take that Excel worksheet and write VBA code to have in-app purchases for SO mugs, tees, hats, keychains, stickers, pens, whatever: just shut up, charge the shipping fees, a 75% markup, and take my money. It's good for the economy; good business for the swag suppliers, and a constant flow of cash from avid users and die-hard fanatics that demand nothing more than throwing their money at you... if you'll let them.

But in-app purchases aren't the real driver (or even necessary): it's implementing the score++ == tooling++ relationship in the app, that encapsulates the essence of SO/SE and gets you a central coherent backbone to implement features against. You avoid overwhelming new users while giving your more experimented faithful users the tools they worked so hard to unlock.

By implementing the tooling associated with reputation score, you teach new users that download this app exactly what SO/SE is about: they get to have this HUGE knowledge base in their pocket, and they're a part of it, and the more they're a part of it the more it's theirs to protect from bad content.

Sounds much like the website? Mission. Fucking. Accomplished.