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Jason C
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So, one of the things I just noticed (a related topic, now deleted, just came up on MSE), not sure how related this is, but once you click on the review icon, its highlighting disappears until... some condition that I'm not sure about. But it stays the same dark color as the rest of the buttons for a pretty long amount of time after that, despite the presence of items in the queue. (The reason I "just noticed" is because I've been more active on sites with the old top bar recently.)

The old top bar behaves the same way, but has the word "review", which stands out merely because it's text, and looking at the bar always necessarily puts the word "review" in the user's head.

The new labelless buttons really don't look like anything interesting at all in comparison, and don't insert "review" into my brain in the same way.

Also it's pretty common these days for apps and sites and stuff to have large collections of unlabelled buttons in a nav bar, I hypothesize that this increases the tendency for the mind to disregard them as "noise" (especially when they all have a similar look), only to be clicked when a specific premeditated action is intended rather than suggesting that a user perform an action they otherwise wouldn't have considered. ("Review? Review what? Let's do this." vs. "Hey look, nav buttons, meh, and besides, hamburger menus raise my cholesterol.")

Why don't you try A/B testing changing it to the word "review" or constantly highlighting it? (Or even perhaps making each of the buttons a unique constant color, something to differentiate them from each other and make them look less like static noise?)

And, being serious, perhaps it's worth some input from the folks at UX?

So, one of the things I just noticed (a related topic, now deleted, just came up on MSE), not sure how related this is, but once you click on the review icon, its highlighting disappears until... some condition that I'm not sure about. But it stays the same dark color as the rest of the buttons for a pretty long amount of time after that, despite the presence of items in the queue. (The reason I "just noticed" is because I've been more active on sites with the old top bar recently.)

The old top bar behaves the same way, but has the word "review", which stands out merely because it's text, and looking at the bar always necessarily puts the word "review" in the user's head.

The new labelless buttons really don't look like anything interesting at all in comparison, and don't insert "review" into my brain in the same way.

Also it's pretty common these days for apps and sites and stuff to have large collections of unlabelled buttons in a nav bar, I hypothesize that this increases the tendency for the mind to disregard them as "noise" (especially when they all have a similar look), only to be clicked when a specific premeditated action is intended rather than suggesting that a user perform an action they otherwise wouldn't have considered. ("Review? Review what?" vs. "Hey look, nav buttons, meh, and besides, hamburger menus raise my cholesterol.")

Why don't you try A/B testing changing it to the word "review" or constantly highlighting it? (Or even perhaps making each of the buttons a unique constant color, something to differentiate them from each other and make them look less like static noise?)

And, being serious, perhaps it's worth some input from the folks at UX?

So, one of the things I just noticed (a related topic, now deleted, just came up on MSE), not sure how related this is, but once you click on the review icon, its highlighting disappears until... some condition that I'm not sure about. But it stays the same dark color as the rest of the buttons for a pretty long amount of time after that, despite the presence of items in the queue. (The reason I "just noticed" is because I've been more active on sites with the old top bar recently.)

The old top bar behaves the same way, but has the word "review", which stands out merely because it's text, and looking at the bar always necessarily puts the word "review" in the user's head.

The new labelless buttons really don't look like anything interesting at all in comparison, and don't insert "review" into my brain in the same way.

Also it's pretty common these days for apps and sites and stuff to have large collections of unlabelled buttons in a nav bar, I hypothesize that this increases the tendency for the mind to disregard them as "noise" (especially when they all have a similar look), only to be clicked when a specific premeditated action is intended rather than suggesting that a user perform an action they otherwise wouldn't have considered. ("Review? Review what? Let's do this." vs. "Hey look, nav buttons, meh, and besides, hamburger menus raise my cholesterol.")

Why don't you try A/B testing changing it to the word "review" or constantly highlighting it? (Or even perhaps making each of the buttons a unique constant color, something to differentiate them from each other and make them look less like static noise?)

And, being serious, perhaps it's worth some input from the folks at UX?

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Jason C
  • 40.2k
  • 12
  • 57
  • 93

So, one of the things I just noticed (a related topic, now deleted, just came up on MSE), not sure how related this is, but once you click on the review icon, its highlighting disappears until... some condition that I'm not sure about. But it stays the same dark color as the rest of the buttons for a pretty long amount of time after that, despite the presence of items in the queue. (The reason I "just noticed" is because I've been more active on sites with the old top bar recently.)

The old top bar behaves the same way, but has the word "review", which stands out merely because it's text, and looking at the bar always necessarily puts the word "review" in the user's head.

The new labelless buttons really don't look like anything interesting at all in comparison, and don't insert "review" into my brain in the same way.

Also it's pretty common these days for apps and sites and stuff to have large collections of unlabelled buttons in a nav bar, I hypothesize that this increases the tendency for the mind to disregard them as "noise" (especially when they all have a similar look), only to be clicked when a specific premeditated action is intended rather than suggesting that a user perform an action they otherwise wouldn't have considered. ("Review? Review what?" vs. "Hey look, nav buttons, meh, and besides, hamburger menus raise my cholesterol.")

Why don't you try A/B testing changing it to the word "review" or constantly highlighting it? (Or even perhaps making each of the buttons a unique constant color, something to differentiate them from each other and make them look less like static noise?)

And, being serious, perhaps it's worth some input from the folks at UX?

So, one of the things I just noticed (a related topic, now deleted, just came up on MSE), not sure how related this is, but once you click on the review icon, its highlighting disappears until... some condition that I'm not sure about. But it stays the same dark color as the rest of the buttons for a pretty long amount of time after that, despite the presence of items in the queue. (The reason I "just noticed" is because I've been more active on sites with the old top bar recently.)

The old top bar behaves the same way, but has the word "review", which stands out merely because it's text, and looking at the bar always necessarily puts the word "review" in the user's head.

The new labelless buttons really don't look like anything interesting at all in comparison, and don't insert "review" into my brain in the same way.

Also it's pretty common these days for apps and sites and stuff to have large collections of unlabelled buttons in a nav bar, I hypothesize that this increases the tendency for the mind to disregard them as "noise" (especially when they all have a similar look), only to be clicked when a specific premeditated action is intended rather than suggesting that a user perform an action they otherwise wouldn't have considered.

Why don't you try A/B testing changing it to the word "review" or constantly highlighting it? (Or even perhaps making each of the buttons a unique constant color, something to differentiate them from each other and make them look less like static noise?)

And, being serious, perhaps it's worth some input from the folks at UX?

So, one of the things I just noticed (a related topic, now deleted, just came up on MSE), not sure how related this is, but once you click on the review icon, its highlighting disappears until... some condition that I'm not sure about. But it stays the same dark color as the rest of the buttons for a pretty long amount of time after that, despite the presence of items in the queue. (The reason I "just noticed" is because I've been more active on sites with the old top bar recently.)

The old top bar behaves the same way, but has the word "review", which stands out merely because it's text, and looking at the bar always necessarily puts the word "review" in the user's head.

The new labelless buttons really don't look like anything interesting at all in comparison, and don't insert "review" into my brain in the same way.

Also it's pretty common these days for apps and sites and stuff to have large collections of unlabelled buttons in a nav bar, I hypothesize that this increases the tendency for the mind to disregard them as "noise" (especially when they all have a similar look), only to be clicked when a specific premeditated action is intended rather than suggesting that a user perform an action they otherwise wouldn't have considered. ("Review? Review what?" vs. "Hey look, nav buttons, meh, and besides, hamburger menus raise my cholesterol.")

Why don't you try A/B testing changing it to the word "review" or constantly highlighting it? (Or even perhaps making each of the buttons a unique constant color, something to differentiate them from each other and make them look less like static noise?)

And, being serious, perhaps it's worth some input from the folks at UX?

Source Link
Jason C
  • 40.2k
  • 12
  • 57
  • 93

So, one of the things I just noticed (a related topic, now deleted, just came up on MSE), not sure how related this is, but once you click on the review icon, its highlighting disappears until... some condition that I'm not sure about. But it stays the same dark color as the rest of the buttons for a pretty long amount of time after that, despite the presence of items in the queue. (The reason I "just noticed" is because I've been more active on sites with the old top bar recently.)

The old top bar behaves the same way, but has the word "review", which stands out merely because it's text, and looking at the bar always necessarily puts the word "review" in the user's head.

The new labelless buttons really don't look like anything interesting at all in comparison, and don't insert "review" into my brain in the same way.

Also it's pretty common these days for apps and sites and stuff to have large collections of unlabelled buttons in a nav bar, I hypothesize that this increases the tendency for the mind to disregard them as "noise" (especially when they all have a similar look), only to be clicked when a specific premeditated action is intended rather than suggesting that a user perform an action they otherwise wouldn't have considered.

Why don't you try A/B testing changing it to the word "review" or constantly highlighting it? (Or even perhaps making each of the buttons a unique constant color, something to differentiate them from each other and make them look less like static noise?)

And, being serious, perhaps it's worth some input from the folks at UX?